Dhawale AK, Miyamoto YR, Smith MA, Olveczky BP (2019). Adaptive regulation of Motor variability
Current Biology doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.08.052
Abstract
Trial-to-trial movement variability can both drive motor
learning and interfere with expert performance,
suggesting benefits of regulating it in context-specific
ways. Here we address whether and how the
brain regulates motor variability as a function of performance
by training rats to execute ballistic forelimb
movements for reward. Behavioral datasets
comprisingmillions of trials revealed thatmotor variability
is regulated by two distinct processes. A fast
process modulates variability as a function of recent
trial outcomes, increasing it when performance is
poor and vice versa. A slower process tunes the
gain of the fast process based on the uncertainty in
the task?s reward landscape. Simulations demonstrated
that this regulation strategy optimizes
reward accumulation over a wide range of time horizons,
while also promoting learning. Our results
uncover a sophisticated algorithm implemented by
the brain to adaptively regulate motor variability to
improve task performance.
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