TY - JOUR
T1 - The Cerebellum and Implicit Sequencing
T2 - Evidence from Cerebellar Ataxia
AU - Morgan, Owen P.
AU - Slapik, Mitchell B.
AU - Iannuzzelli, Katherine G.
AU - LaConte, Stephen M.
AU - Lisinski, Jonathan M.
AU - Nopoulos, Peg C.
AU - Cochran, Ashley M.
AU - Kronemer, Sharif I.
AU - Rosenthal, Liana S.
AU - Marvel, Cherie L.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Cyrus Eierud for an initial version of the task that was adapted here for Experiment 1, Leah Rubin for her statistical support of Experiment 2, Erin Hill for her assistance with Experiment 5, and Jason Creighton for his assistance with data collection in all experiments. We are extremely grateful to the National Ataxia Foundation for providing resources for testing at their 2018 and 2019 Annual Ataxia Conferences. Finally, we thank the volunteers, with and without ataxia, who contributed their valuable time and effort to this research.
Funding Information:
Funding for this study was provided by the Gordon and Marilyn Macklin Foundation and the Margaret Q. Landenberger Foundation. Acknowledgments
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2021/4
Y1 - 2021/4
N2 - The cerebellum recognizes sequences from prior experiences and uses this information to generate internal models that predict future outcomes in a feedforward manner [Front Hum Neurosci 8: 475, 2014; Cortex 47: 137–44, 2011; Cerebellum 7: 611–5, 2008; J Neurosci 26: 9107–16, 2006]. This process has been well documented in the motor domain, but the cerebellum’s role in cognitive sequencing, within the context of implicit versus explicit processes, is not well characterized. In this study, we tested individuals with cerebellar ataxia and healthy controls to clarify the role of the cerebellum sequencing using variations on implicit versus explicit and motor versus cognitive demands across five experiments. Converging results across these studies suggest that cerebellar feedforward mechanisms may be necessary for sequencing in the implicit domain only. In the ataxia group, rhythmic tapping, rate of motor learning, and implicit sequence learning were impaired. However, for cognitive sequencing that could be accomplished using explicit strategies, the cerebellar group performed normally, as though they shifted to extra-cerebellar mechanisms to compensate. For example, when cognitive and motor functions relied on cerebellar function simultaneously, the ataxia group’s motor function was unaffected, in contrast to that of controls whose motor performance declined as a function of cognitive load. These findings indicated that the cerebellum is not critical for all forms of sequencing per se. Instead, it plays a fundamental role for sequencing within the implicit domain, whether functions are motor or cognitive. Moreover, individuals with cerebellar ataxia are generally able to compensate for cognitive sequencing when explicit strategies are available in order to preserve resources for motor function.
AB - The cerebellum recognizes sequences from prior experiences and uses this information to generate internal models that predict future outcomes in a feedforward manner [Front Hum Neurosci 8: 475, 2014; Cortex 47: 137–44, 2011; Cerebellum 7: 611–5, 2008; J Neurosci 26: 9107–16, 2006]. This process has been well documented in the motor domain, but the cerebellum’s role in cognitive sequencing, within the context of implicit versus explicit processes, is not well characterized. In this study, we tested individuals with cerebellar ataxia and healthy controls to clarify the role of the cerebellum sequencing using variations on implicit versus explicit and motor versus cognitive demands across five experiments. Converging results across these studies suggest that cerebellar feedforward mechanisms may be necessary for sequencing in the implicit domain only. In the ataxia group, rhythmic tapping, rate of motor learning, and implicit sequence learning were impaired. However, for cognitive sequencing that could be accomplished using explicit strategies, the cerebellar group performed normally, as though they shifted to extra-cerebellar mechanisms to compensate. For example, when cognitive and motor functions relied on cerebellar function simultaneously, the ataxia group’s motor function was unaffected, in contrast to that of controls whose motor performance declined as a function of cognitive load. These findings indicated that the cerebellum is not critical for all forms of sequencing per se. Instead, it plays a fundamental role for sequencing within the implicit domain, whether functions are motor or cognitive. Moreover, individuals with cerebellar ataxia are generally able to compensate for cognitive sequencing when explicit strategies are available in order to preserve resources for motor function.
KW - Ataxia
KW - Cerebellum
KW - Explicit
KW - Implicit
KW - Motor
KW - Sequencing
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U2 - 10.1007/s12311-020-01206-7
DO - 10.1007/s12311-020-01206-7
M3 - Article
C2 - 33123963
AN - SCOPUS:85094672941
SN - 1473-4222
VL - 20
SP - 222
EP - 245
JO - Cerebellum
JF - Cerebellum
IS - 2
ER -