Neuronal mechanisms of motor learning are age dependent

Kelly M. M. Berghuis*, Veerle De Rond, Inge Zijdewind, Giacomo Koch, Menno P. Veldman, Tibor Hortobagyi

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

18 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

There is controversy whether age-related neuroanatomical and neurophysiological changes in the central nervous system affect healthy old adults' abilities to acquire and retain motor skills. We examined the effects of age on motor skill acquisition and retention and potential underlying mechanisms by measuring corticospinal and intracortical excitability, using transcranial magnetic stimulation. Healthy young (n = 24, 22 years) and old (n = 22, 71 years) adults practiced a wrist flexion-extention visuomotor task or only watched the templates as an attentional control for 20 minutes. Old compared with young adults performed less well at baseline. Although the absolute magnitude of skill acquisition and retention was similar in the 2 age groups (age x intervention x time, p - 0.425), a comparison of baseline-similar age sub-groups revealed impaired skill acquisition but not retention in old versus young. Furthermore, the neuronal mechanisms differed as revealed by an opposite direction of associations in the age-groups between relative skill acquisition and intracortical facilitation during the task, and opposite changes during skill retention in corticospinal excitability at rest and during the task and intracortical inhibition during the task. (C) 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)149-159
Number of pages11
JournalNeurobiology of Aging
Volume46
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct-2016

Keywords

  • Motor skill
  • Retention
  • Transcranial magnetic stimulation
  • Corticospinal excitability
  • Short-interval intracortical inhibition
  • Aging
  • TRANSCRANIAL MAGNETIC STIMULATION
  • SKILL ACQUISITION
  • OLDER-ADULTS
  • AGING BRAIN
  • CORTEX
  • PLASTICITY
  • EXCITABILITY
  • CONSOLIDATION
  • SEQUENCE
  • NETWORK

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