Newswise — Learning motor skills depends on the brain's ability to change, or be plastic. Specifically, the primary motor cortex of the brain can change as a person learns new motor tasks. When someone learns a complex task that involves fine motor control, like grasping an object, their brain undergoes large changes in the representation of the body part that controls the fine movements. In contrast, simpler tasks do not lead to such changes.

In this study, researchers at Burke Neurological Institute investigated the role of a specific group of neurons, called corticospinal neurons, in learning and performing different motor tasks. Corticospinal neurons provide output from the brain directly to the spinal cord. The researchers used calcium imaging to measure activity in these neurons in mice as they learned to perform two different tasks: one that required precise movements of the forelimb, and another that was simpler and did not require as much precision.

The researchers found that the activity of corticospinal neurons was different depending on the task the mice were performing. Specifically, the neurons showed patterns of activity that were associated with the timing of the precise movements required for the more complex task, but not for the simpler task. Further experiments showed that corticospinal neuron activity was necessary for performing the complex task, but not the simpler one.

Overall, these findings suggest that the corticospinal network in the brain plays an important role in learning and executing precise motor movements. This research was supported by the Burke Foundation, the New York State Department of Health Spinal Cord Injury Research Board, the Craig H. Neilsen Foundation, and the National Institutes of Health.

Journal Link: Nature Communications

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CITATIONS

Nature Communications; NIH DP2 NS106663; NIH R01 NS105725; NIH R03 NS103070; NYS DOH SCIRB C30844GG

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