Perceptual error based on Bayesian cue combination drives implicit motor adaptation

Author:

Zhang Zhaoran1ORCID,Wang Huijun1,Zhang Tianyang1,Nie Zixuan1,Wei Kunlin1234ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychological and Cognitive Sciences, Peking University

2. Beijing Key Laboratory of Behavior and Mental Health

3. Peking-Tsinghua Center for Life Sciences, Peking University

4. National Key Laboratory of General Artificial Intelligence

Abstract

The sensorimotor system can recalibrate itself without our conscious awareness, a type of procedural learning whose computational mechanism remains undefined. Recent findings on implicit motor adaptation, such as over-learning from small perturbations and fast saturation for increasing perturbation size, challenge existing theories based on sensory errors. We argue that perceptual error, arising from the optimal combination of movement-related cues, is the primary driver of implicit adaptation. Central to our theory is the increasing sensory uncertainty of visual cues with increasing perturbations, which was validated through perceptual psychophysics (Experiment 1). Our theory predicts the learning dynamics of implicit adaptation across a spectrum of perturbation sizes on a trial-by-trial basis (Experiment 2). It explains proprioception changes and their relation to visual perturbation (Experiment 3). By modulating visual uncertainty in perturbation, we induced unique adaptation responses in line with our model predictions (Experiment 4). Overall, our perceptual error framework outperforms existing models based on sensory errors, suggesting that perceptual error in locating one’s effector, supported by Bayesian cue integration, underpins the sensorimotor system’s implicit adaptation.

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

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