Top-down and bottom-up oscillatory dynamics regulate implicit visuomotor sequence learning

Author:

Lum Jarrad A G12ORCID,Barham Michael P12,Hyde Christian12,Hill Aron T12,White David J34,Hughes Matthew E34ORCID,Clark Gillian M12

Affiliation:

1. Cognitive Neuroscience Unit , School of Psychology, , Burwood, VIC 3125 , Australia

2. Deakin University , School of Psychology, , Burwood, VIC 3125 , Australia

3. Centre for Mental Health & Brain Sciences , , Hawthorn, VIC 3122 , Australia

4. Swinburne University of Technology , , Hawthorn, VIC 3122 , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Implicit visuomotor sequence learning is crucial for acquiring skills that result in automated behaviors. The oscillatory dynamics underpinning this learning process are not well understood. To address this gap, the current study employed electroencephalography with a medium-density array (64 electrodes) to investigate oscillatory activity associated with implicit visuomotor sequence learning in the Serial Reaction Time task. In the task, participants unknowingly learn a series of finger movements. Eighty-five healthy adults participated in the study. Analyses revealed that theta activity at the vertex and alpha/beta activity over the motor areas decreased over the course of learning. No associations between alpha/beta and theta power were observed. These findings are interpreted within a dual-process framework: midline theta activity is posited to regulate top-down attentional processes, whereas beta activity from motor areas underlies the bottom-up encoding of sensory information from movement. From this model, we suggest that during implicit visuomotor sequence learning, top-down processes become disengaged (indicated by a reduction in theta activity), and modality specific bottom-up processes encode the motor sequence (indicated by a reduction in alpha/beta activity).

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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