Title
Efficacy of auditory versus motor learning for skilled and novice performers
Abstract
AbstractHumans must learn a variety of sensorimotor skills, yet the relative contributions of sensory and motor information to skill acquisition remain unclear. Here we compare the behavioral and neural contributions of perceptual learning to that of motor learning, and we test whether these contributions depend on the expertise of the learner. Pianists and nonmusicians learned to perform novel melodies on a piano during fMRI scanning in four learning conditions: listening auditory learning, performing without auditory feedback motor learning, performing with auditory feedback auditory-motor learning, or observing visual cues without performing or listening cue-only learning. Visual cues were present in every learning condition and consisted of musical notation for pianists and spatial cues for nonmusicians. Melodies were performed from memory with no visual cues and with auditory feedback recall five times during learning. Pianists showed greater improvements in pitch and rhythm accuracy at recall during auditory learning compared with motor learning. Nonmusicians demonstrated greater rhythm improvements at recall during auditory learning compared with all other learning conditions. Pianists showed greater primary motor response at recall during auditory learning compared with motor learning, and response in this region during auditory learning correlated with pitch accuracy at recall and with auditory-premotor network response during auditory learning. Nonmusicians showed greater inferior parietal response during auditory compared with auditory-motor learning, and response in this region correlated with pitch accuracy at recall. Results suggest an advantage for perceptual learning compared with motor learning that is both general and expertise-dependent. This advantage is hypothesized to depend on feedforward motor control systems that can be used during learning to transform sensory information into motor production.
Year
DOI
Venue
2018
10.1162/jocn_a_01309
Periodicals
Field
DocType
Volume
Motor learning,Sensorimotor skills,Working memory,Cognitive psychology,Psychology,Dreyfus model of skill acquisition,Sensory system,Superior temporal sulcus
Journal
30
Issue
ISSN
Citations 
11
0898-929X
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
21
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Rachel M. Brown100.34
Virginia B. Penhune2575.61