Sensorimotor feedback loops are selectively sensitive to reward

Author:

Codol Olivier123ORCID,Kashefi Mehrdad1245ORCID,Forgaard Christopher J12,Galea Joseph M3ORCID,Pruszynski J Andrew1245ORCID,Gribble Paul L1246ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Brain and Mind Institute, University of Western Ontario

2. Department of Psychology, University of Western Ontario

3. School of Psychology, University of Birmingham

4. Department of Physiology & Pharmacology, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, University of Western Ontario

5. Robarts Research Institute, University of Western Ontario

6. Haskins Laboratories

Abstract

Although it is well established that motivational factors such as earning more money for performing well improve motor performance, how the motor system implements this improvement remains unclear. For instance, feedback-based control, which uses sensory feedback from the body to correct for errors in movement, improves with greater reward. But feedback control encompasses many feedback loops with diverse characteristics such as the brain regions involved and their response time. Which specific loops drive these performance improvements with reward is unknown, even though their diversity makes it unlikely that they are contributing uniformly. We systematically tested the effect of reward on the latency (how long for a corrective response to arise?) and gain (how large is the corrective response?) of seven distinct sensorimotor feedback loops in humans. Only the fastest feedback loops were insensitive to reward, and the earliest reward-driven changes were consistently an increase in feedback gains, not a reduction in latency. Rather, a reduction of response latencies only tended to occur in slower feedback loops. These observations were similar across sensory modalities (vision and proprioception). Our results may have implications regarding feedback control performance in athletic coaching. For instance, coaching methodologies that rely on reinforcement or ‘reward shaping’ may need to specifically target aspects of movement that rely on reward-sensitive feedback responses.

Funder

Natural Science and Engineering Council of Canada

Canadian Institue of Health Research

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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