Experience-dependent alterations in conscious resting state activity following perceptuomotor learning
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| Publication date | 2010 |
| Journal | Neurobiology of Learning and Memory |
| Volume | Issue number | 93 | 3 |
| Pages (from-to) | 422-427 |
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| Abstract |
In monkeys and rats, neural activity patterns during learning are reactivated during subsequent periods of rest or sleep. According to the reactivation-consolidation account, this process underlies the consolidation of memories. Brain imaging studies have extended these findings to humans during sleep, but not yet, during rest. Here, we show that learning-related reactivation also occurs in humans during rest. During functional MRI-scanning, participants trained on a perceptuomotor task flanked by rest periods. During training, we found robust activity in the superior parietal cortex. During post-training rest, this same area reactivated. We also found a link between parietal reactivation and learning. Activity in superior parietal cortex was associated with learning during training, and a control group that did not train on the perceptuomotor task did not show any difference between the pre- and post-training rest blocks in this region. These findings indicate that, during rest, reactivation also occurs in humans. This process may contribute to consolidation of perceptuomotor memories.
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| Document type | Article |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nlm.2009.12.009 |
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