Generating variability from motor primitives during infant locomotor development

Author:

Hinnekens Elodie12ORCID,Barbu-Roth Marianne3,Do Manh-Cuong12,Berret Bastien124,Teulier Caroline12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Université Paris-Saclay, CIAMS

2. Université d'Orléans, CIAMS

3. Université de Paris, CNRS, Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center

4. Institut Universitaire de France

Abstract

Motor variability is a fundamental feature of developing systems allowing motor exploration and learning. In human infants, leg movements involve a small number of basic coordination patterns called locomotor primitives, but whether and when motor variability could emerge from these primitives remains unknown. Here we longitudinally followed 18 infants on 2–3 time points between birth (~4 days old) and walking onset (~14 months old) and recorded the activity of their leg muscles during locomotor or rhythmic movements. Using unsupervised machine learning, we show that the structure of trial-to-trial variability changes during early development. In the neonatal period, infants own a minimal number of motor primitives but generate a maximal motor variability across trials thanks to variable activations of these primitives. A few months later, toddlers generate significantly less variability despite the existence of more primitives due to more regularity within their activation. These results suggest that human neonates initiate motor exploration as soon as birth by variably activating a few basic locomotor primitives that later fraction and become more consistently activated by the motor system.

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

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

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