Dance Training Shapes Action Perception and Its Neural Implementation within the Young and Older Adult Brain

Author:

Kirsch Louise P.12,Diersch Nadine3,Sumanapala Dilini K.14,Cross Emily S.15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Social Brain in Action Laboratory, Wales Institute for Cognitive Neuroscience, School of Psychology, Bangor University, Bangor, UK

2. Research Department of Clinical, Educational, and Health Psychology, Division of Psychology and Language Sciences, Faculty of Brain Sciences, University College London, London, UK

3. Aging & Cognition Research Group, German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Magdeburg, Germany

4. Centre for Brain and Cognitive Development, Birkbeck College, University of London, London, UK

5. Institute of Neuroscience and Psychology & School of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK

Abstract

How we perceive others in action is shaped by our prior experience. Many factors influence brain responses when observing others in action, including training in a particular physical skill, such as sport or dance, and also general development and aging processes. Here, we investigate how learning a complex motor skill shapes neural and behavioural responses among a dance-naïve sample of 20 young and 19 older adults. Across four days, participants physically rehearsed one set of dance sequences, observed a second set, and a third set remained untrained. Functional MRI was obtained prior to and immediately following training. Participants’ behavioural performance on motor and visual tasks improved across the training period, with younger adults showing steeper performance gains than older adults. At the brain level, both age groups demonstrated decreased sensorimotor cortical engagement after physical training, with younger adults showing more pronounced decreases in inferior parietal activity compared to older adults. Neural decoding results demonstrate that among both age groups, visual and motor regions contain experience-specific representations of new motor learning. By combining behavioural measures of performance with univariate and multivariate measures of brain activity, we can start to build a more complete picture of age-related changes in experience-dependent plasticity.

Funder

European Research Council

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Clinical Neurology,Neurology

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