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The Journal of Neuroscience, March 1, 1998, 18(5):1827-1840
Transition of Brain Activation from Frontal to Parietal Areas in
Visuomotor Sequence Learning
Katsuyuki
Sakai1, 2,
Okihide
Hikosaka1,
Satoru
Miyauchi3,
Ryousuke
Takino4,
Yuka
Sasaki3, and
Benno
Pütz5
1 Department of Physiology, Juntendo University School
of Medicine, Tokyo 113, Japan, 2 Department of Neurology,
Division of Neuroscience, Graduate School of Medicine, University of
Tokyo, Tokyo 113, Japan, 3 Human Neurosystem Science
Section, Intelligent Communications Division, Communications Research
Laboratory, Tokyo 184, Japan, 4 Shiraume Gakuen College,
Tokyo 187, Japan, and 5 Exploratory Research for Advanced
Technology, Japan Science and Technology Corporation, Kyoto 619-02, Japan
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ABSTRACT |
We studied the neural correlates of visuomotor sequence learning
using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). In the test
condition, subjects learned, by trial and error, the correct order of
pressing two buttons consecutively for 10 pairs of buttons (2 × 10 task); in the control condition, they pressed buttons in any order.
Comparison between the test condition and the control condition
revealed four brain areas specifically related to learning: the
dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), the presupplementary motor area
(pre-SMA), the precuneus, and the intraparietal sulcus (IPS). We found
that the time course of activation during learning was different
between these areas. To normalize the individual differences in the
speed of learning, we classified the performance of each subject into
three learning stages: early, intermediate, and advanced stages. Both
the relative increase of signal intensity and the number of activated
pixels within the four areas showed significant changes across the
learning stages, with different time courses. The two frontal areas,
DLPFC and pre-SMA, were activated in the earlier stages of learning,
whereas the two parietal areas, precuneus and IPS, were activated in
the later stages. Specifically, DLPFC, pre-SMA, precuneus, and IPS were
most highly activated in the early stage, in both the early and
intermediate stages, in the intermediate stage, and in both the
intermediate and advanced stages, respectively. The results suggest
that the acquisition of visuomotor sequences requires frontal
activation, whereas the retrieval of visuomotor sequences requires
parietal activation, which might reflect the transition from the
declarative stage to the procedural stage.
Key words:
visuomotor sequence; learning; functional magnetic
resonance imaging; procedure; prefrontal cortex; presupplementary motor
area; precuneus; intraparietal sulcus
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INTRODUCTION |
The pattern of human brain
activation in motor learning has been extensively studied using various
paradigms, including pursuit rotor task (Grafton et al., 1992 , 1994 ),
complex sequential finger movements (Seitz et al., 1990 ; Schlaug et
al., 1994 ; Karni et al., 1995 ), sequential eye movements (Petit et al.,
1996 ), and serial reaction time task (Grafton et al., 1995 ; Rauch et
al., 1995 ), as well as motor learning with trial and error (Jenkins et
al., 1994 ; Jueptner et al., 1997a ,b ). These studies have shown activation of several areas in the association cortices and subcortical structures. Specifically, the prefrontal and posterior parietal cortices were activated when the subject was explicitly learning a new
motor behavior (Jenkins et al., 1994 ; Schlaug et al., 1994 ; Grafton et
al., 1995 ; Jueptner et al., 1997a ), and the activation decreased when
the subjects had learned the behavior (Seitz et al., 1990 ; Grafton et
al., 1994 ; Jenkins et al., 1994 ). However, there have been few studies
until recently that asked whether the time course of activation was
different between the prefrontal and posterior parietal areas (Shadmehr
and Holcomb, 1997 ).
We have been studying the neural mechanism of learning using a
behavioral paradigm called 2 × 10 task (2 × 5 task for
monkeys) (Hikosaka et al., 1995 , 1996 ). In this task, 10 pairs of
targets are presented consecutively in a fixed order, and subjects have to press the corresponding buttons in the correct order that they have
to find by trial and error. After repeating the same sequence sufficiently often, the performance of the subject becomes nearly automatic. This task was first applied to experiments using monkeys (Hikosaka et al., 1995 ). Miyashita et al. (1995) showed that the neurons in the presupplementary motor area (pre-SMA) were activated preferentially for new sequences and that the activity decreased over
time as the monkey acquired the sequence. However, it was difficult to
compare the activities between different areas simultaneously. Imaging
studies should be advantageous in this respect. We thus decided to
apply the same task to human subjects using the functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI) technique. In the preceding paper, we reported
that the anterior portion of the medial premotor cortex, which was
presumed to be the pre-SMA, was activated during learning (Hikosaka et
al., 1996 ). In the present study, we found that two frontal areas
(including the pre-SMA) and two parietal areas showed learning-related
activation. Our main interest was to compare the time course of
activation among the four cortical areas.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Subjects
Seven normal subjects participated in the study (six males and
one female; ages 29-50; all right-handed). Informed consents were
obtained from all of the subjects before the study. Four of the seven
subjects were studied repeatedly.
Stimuli and apparatus
Four white rectangles arranged in a two × two matrix were
shown on a screen in which two circles appeared simultaneously (called "set"). A total of 10 sets (called "hyperset") was sequentially presented in a fixed order. Presentation of the stimuli and generation of the sequence were controlled by a computer (PC9801FA or PC9821Ap2; NEC). The subjects lay supine in the MRI scanner and saw the visual stimuli through a mirror. They held a plate on which four button switches were arranged in a two × two matrix, corresponding to the four rectangles on the screen. During the fMRI experiments, an
auditory cue was presented at a constant rate of 1 Hz through headphones.
Behavioral task
True learning: test condition. The test paradigm,
"true learning," required the subjects to learn the correct order
of button presses by trial and error (Hikosaka et al., 1996 ) and was
modified from the 2 × 5 task originally devised for monkeys
(Hikosaka et al., 1995 ). The subject was asked to press sequentially
the two buttons corresponding to the circles presented on the screen
with the index and the middle fingers of both hands. Instruction was given to use only one finger per button. The positions and the order of
the circles were fixed in each set, as was the order of the 10 sets
within one hyperset (an example is shown in Fig. 1). The subject had to find the correct
order of button presses by trial and error for the consecutive 10 sets.
If a button was pressed in the wrong order in any set, the two circles
disappeared simultaneously, and after a pause of 0.5 sec, the subject
had to start over again from the first set of the sequence. If the buttons were pressed in the correct order, the circles disappeared after each button press, and after a pause of 0.1 sec, the next set
started. After successful completion of 10 sets, the same hyperset was
repeated from the beginning. Because there was no general rule to find
out the correct order, the subject had to learn the whole hyperset as a
single unique sequence.

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Figure 1.
Diagram of 2 × 10 position sequence task.
The subjects had to press sequentially the two buttons corresponding to
the positions of the displayed circles (set). The
correct order of the button presses was predetermined by the computer,
and the subjects had to find it by trial and error. Ten consecutive
sets (Hyperset) were presented in a fixed order. If the
subjects pressed a button in the wrong order in any set or completed
the hyperset, they started the same sequence from the first set.
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Pseudo learning: control condition. The aim of the present
study was to analyze the learning-related brain activation. However, the test paradigm required the subjects to look at the visual stimuli
and to move their fingers. To subtract these sensorimotor activities,
we devised a control paradigm that we call "pseudo learning," in
which the subject experienced the same sensorimotor processes but in
which no learning was involved. In this task, two circles appeared
simultaneously within a two × two matrix, and the subject had to
press the corresponding buttons, similarly to the true-learning task.
However, the correct order of button presses was randomized for each
trial. Therefore, it was no use for the subject to try to learn the
correct order, and the subject was instructed to press the buttons in
any order. To mimic the true-learning process, we decreased gradually
the probability of error for a given set from the chance level (50%)
to 0% each time the set was completed successfully. Thus, the number
of completed sets in each trial gradually increased up to 10 sets,
similarly to the true-learning process.
Using pseudo learning as the control task and true learning as the test
task, we performed fMRI experiments. Comparison of the magnetic
resonance signals between the two conditions would reveal selectively
the learning-related activation. Additionally, on a separate session,
we measured the reaction time of button pressing to see the change in
the speed of information processing during learning.
Procedures for fMRI experiment
Before the fMRI experiments, the subjects were instructed about
the task and practiced both the true-learning and pseudo-learning tasks
on a training hyperset. After the subjects practiced for ~0.5 hr, the
following fMRI experiments were conducted using a new hyperset.
Subjects were scanned using the head coil of a 1.5 tesla whole-body
scanner (Siemens, Erlangen, Germany). Head motion was reduced by using
a bite bar, straps around the forehead, and ear fixation blocks. First,
we obtained a high resolution series of T1-weighted anatomical images
of the whole brain (FLASH; TR/TE/TI/FA/matrix/FOV, 2800/4/300/15/256 × 256/256 × 256; slice thickness, 1 mm)
in contiguous sagittal sections, which served as the data set for the
determination of anatomical landmarks and coordinates.
Then, a time series of 128 scans were performed with interscan
intervals of 4.0 sec (five subjects) or 6.0 sec (two subjects), while
the subjects performed eight alternating epochs of the test and control
tasks. In each scan, 10 axial slices of T2-weighted gradient-echo
echo-planar images (TR/TE/TI/FA, 122/66/300/90) were collected parallel
to the line connecting the anterior and posterior commissure (AC-PC
line), and the bottom slice was adjusted to include the AC-PC line.
Images of 5 mm thickness were obtained with a 128 × 128 matrix
and 1.72 × 1.72 mm in-plane resolution.
The subject performed true learning for the test epochs and pseudo
learning for the control epochs. The same hyperset was used throughout
the eight test epochs. Hypersets for the test and control conditions
were different, so that the subject could not practice (or rehearse)
the test sequence. The pseudo-learning task was complex enough to
prevent the mental rehearsal of the hyperset that the subject was
learning in the test condition. In the control epochs, unlike in the
test epochs, the order of sets was randomized so that the subject could
not learn a particular sequence spontaneously. The rate of button
presses was controlled for both the test and control conditions; the
subject was asked to pace two button presses (i.e., one set) with an
auditory cue presented at a constant rate of 1 Hz. "Learn" or
"pseudo" were presented on the screen before each epoch to indicate
the next condition. During that time, one dummy scan was acquired that was not included in the functional analysis, followed by seven scans
for the test or control epoch. The times between stimulus presentation
and button presses as well as the judgment of the button presses
(correct or wrong) were recorded and stored in the computer.
Analysis of behavioral data
fMRI experiments. The number of completed sets in
each trial of the subjects was recorded. Because each epoch lasted 28 (4 × 7) sec or 42 (6 × 7) sec and a successful performance
of the whole hyperset took 10 sec, the subjects could complete the
whole hyperset from two to four times within an epoch (if they made no
error). The number of trials within an epoch could be larger if the
subject made errors (see Fig. 2).
To correlate the brain activation with the grade of learning, we
classified the eight test epochs into one of the three learning stages
based on the performance of individual subjects (which showed
considerable variation) using the following criteria: early stage,
epochs in which the subject could not complete the hyperset; intermediate stage, epochs in which the subject could complete the
hyperset but also made errors in other trials; and advanced stage,
epochs in which the subject made no error.
The experiments in which the subjects could not reach the advanced
stage or reached it only in the last test epoch were not included for
further analysis. These subjects were tested again using a new hyperset
until they showed sufficient learning.
Reaction time measurements. In the fMRI experiments, the
button presses were paced. We thought, however, that it was important to know the speed of information processing during learning. We thus
performed an experiment for reaction time measurements as a separate
session. The subjects, seated in front of the computer, were asked to
learn a new hyperset by pressing buttons as quickly as possible and at
the same time to minimize the number of errors while learning a
hyperset. In each trial, the number of completed sets as well as the
performance time for each trial was recorded. "Set completion time"
was calculated for each trial by dividing the performance time by the
number of completed sets; it corresponded to the mean time to complete
a set (to press two buttons in a set).
An additional experiment was performed for four subjects to estimate
the grade of learning after a learning session of the fMRI experiment.
The subjects were asked to learn a hyperset in the same way they did in
the fMRI experiments with their movement rate paced at 1 Hz, after
which they were asked to perform the same hyperset as quickly as
possible. The set completion time was calculated to see whether the
improvement of performance occurred during the fMRI experiment
similarly to that in the reaction time measurement session.
Eye movement recording. Eye movements were recorded in one
subject by using an infrared eye tracker (Ober 2-12 bit parallel system; Permobil Meditech, Woburn, MA), while the subject performed the
same task procedure used in the fMRI experiment. This session was
conducted within the MRI scanner, but no scan was performed because it
would cause severe artifacts on the eye movement recordings. The
saccades with an amplitude exceeding 2° were counted every 30 sec for
both the test and control conditions. This amplitude corresponded to
the angular distance between two adjacent circles on the screen.
Analysis of fMRI data
Motion correction. First, we applied a motion
correction program, AIR 3.0, to the obtained images (Woods et al.,
1992 , 1993 ). The first image of the sequence was designated as the
reference, and each subsequent image volume was aligned with the
reference in a pairwise manner. After a ratio-variance minimization
process for each pair, a new time sequence of image sets was created by reslicing each of the original image sets. This program would produce
images with residual motion under 0.5 mm and would remove significant
motion-induced artifacts while restoring true regions of activation
(Jiang et al., 1995 ).
Overview of the time course analysis. Based on these
functional image data sets, we identified learning-related areas and analyzed the time course of activation for these areas. To account for
the difference in the learning performance between subjects, we
compared the pattern of brain activation between the three learning
stages described above using two methods, one method based on the
change in the relative signal intensity (SI) increase and the other
based on the change in the number of activated pixels.
For the SI method, we first created activation maps from the entire
time series of SI data and identified learning-related areas. We then
calculated the time course of activation for each learning-related
area. The disadvantage of this method is that the brain area that was
activated only for a short period during the learning process would not
have been detected.
Such errors would be minimized by the activated-pixel method. We
divided the entire learning period into the three learning stages based
on the performance of the subject and created an activation map for
each learning stage. However, the data obtained with this method would
not reflect the change in the magnitude of activation.
Therefore, we used these two methods so that each method would
compensate for the shortcomings of the other. The details of these
methods are described in the following sections.
Time course analysis 1: change in SI. In the first method,
we analyzed the time course of SI changes for representative brain areas that showed significant activation based on the data for the
entire learning period. After eliminating the SI data during the
instruction period (16 data points), the time series of SI data (112 data points, seven scans in each of the eight epochs for the test and
the control conditions) was cross-correlated with an idealized
reference function derived from task alternation (Bandettini et al.,
1992 , 1993 ; Friston et al., 1994 ). The reference function was
represented by a boxcar waveform shifted by one data point to account
for the hemodynamic latencies and rise times. If the correlation
coefficient (CC) calculated for a pixel was >0.3, the pixel was
determined to show learning-related activation. This threshold of 112 data points corresponds to a statistical significance of p < 0.001 for the Student's t test. Pixels activated in
isolation were excluded from the activation maps. For graphical presentation, we assigned colors from red to dark blue for CCs of 1.0 to 1.0. These activation foci were superimposed onto the corresponding coplanar anatomical echo-planar images. The locations of
the activation foci were determined further on the basis of the high
resolution T1-weighted FLASH images by using a multiplanar reconstruction method. Although the functional images obtained by the
echo-planar sequence were distorted compared with the anatomical images
obtained by the FLASH sequence, we could determine the location of each
activation focus by identifying the major sulci and gyri (Ono et al.,
1990 ; Duvernoy, 1991 ; Naidich et al., 1995 ).
In addition, the high resolution anatomical images for each subject
were individually registered onto the Talairach atlas (Talairach and
Tournoux, 1988 ) with a polynomial transformation using MEDx 2.0 (Sensor
Systems), and the coordinates of the learning-related areas were
obtained. This procedure was taken only to confirm the consistency of
the location of learning-related areas across the subjects, and we used
the untransformed data for the subsequent time course analysis. Also no
attempt was made to average the activation maps for different subjects,
which would likely have resulted in artifactually diminished magnitudes
of activation. Thus, the learning-related areas were identified
individually for each subject.
To analyze the time course of brain activation, we calculated SI,
the SI change (test control), for each of the eight test epochs
individually for each activation focus. Before averaging the SIs within
each activation focus, the relative SI change between the test and
control conditions was analyzed individually for each pixel. Pixels
with abnormally high SI increases (>10%) would be suspect for
underlying vasculatures. Close inspection of the T2-weighted
echo-planar anatomical images usually revealed underlying vasculatures
in the corresponding areas that showed up as dark spots. These data
containing vasculatures were excluded from the analysis. Then the
average of the SIs of all the pixels within each activation focus was
calculated for each of the 112 functional image data sets. Then, the
average of the SIs for the before and after control epochs (seven data
points for each) was subtracted from the average SI at the given test
epoch (seven data points) and was expressed as the percent of the
averaged SI for the control condition: SI(n) = 100 × ([mean SI_T(n)] [mean SI_C(n,
n + 1)]) / [mean SI_C(n, n + 1)],
where SI(n) is the SI for the nth test
epoch, mean SI_T(n) is the mean SI of the nth
test epoch, and mean SI_C(n, n + 1) is the mean
SI of the nth and (n + 1)th control epochs. An
exception was that SI for the last test epoch, SI(8), was
calculated by subtracting only the mean SI for the eighth control
epoch.
SI thus calculated should reflect the degree of learning-related
activation for the given test epoch, and the change in SI across the
eight learning epochs would reflect the time course of activation at
the selected brain area. We then calculated the mean of SIs during
each learning stage to correlate the individual learning performance to
the time course of brain activation. Thus, the SIs across the
learning stages obtained for individual subjects were compared using
Wilcoxon's signed rank test.
Time course analysis 2: change in the number of activated
pixels. In the second method, we created activation maps
individually for each of the three learning stages. The time series of
SI data for each learning stage was separately cross-correlated with
the boxcar reference function, and significant activation was
determined as pixels above the threshold CC. Pixels activated in
isolation were eliminated from the analysis, and the activation foci
observed in more than four subjects were analyzed. For each learning
stage, the threshold CC was determined so as to correspond to the
p value of 0.01. The corresponding CC was calculated by the
following equation (B. Pütz et al., unpublished observations):
CC = [t2 /
(t2 + n 2)]1/2, where t represents the Student's
t test value for n 2 degrees of freedom
(n denotes the number of data points included in the CC
calculation). For example, when the subjects completed the hyperset in
the fourth test epoch, the SI data from the first to the third test and
control epochs were included in the data set for the early stage. The
number of data points was 42 (2 conditions × 7 scans × 3 epochs), resulting in the 40 degrees of freedom. Because the
t value corresponding to a p value of 0.01 is
2.423, the corresponding CC was calculated to be 0.3578. The activation map for the early stage was created by using this value of CC.
In this way, three activation maps were created for each subject, each
map corresponding to one learning stage. We counted the number of
activated pixels for each activation focus and then compared them
between the three learning stages using Wilcoxon's signed rank
test.
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RESULTS |
Behavioral data
fMRI experiments
The subjects, lying supine in the MRI scanner, learned a single
sequence (hyperset) during a session of the fMRI experiment. The
learning was divided into eight epochs (test condition), which were
alternated with eight epochs of pseudo learning (control condition).
Four of the seven subjects did not show sufficient learning within the
period of the fMRI experiment and were tested again using a new
sequence. Only the data with sufficient learning were analyzed. As the
subjects learned a hyperset in the test condition, the number of
completed sets for each trial gradually increased (Fig.
2a, left). The
whole hyperset (i.e., 10 sets) has been completed usually by the third
to the sixth test epoch (e.g., fourth test epoch for the subject shown
in Fig. 2a). However, the learning was incomplete, and the
subjects still made errors before completing the hyperset (e.g., fourth
to the sixth epochs in Fig. 2a). By the sixth to the eighth
epoch, the subjects were able to complete the hyperset without an error
(e.g., seventh test epoch in Fig. 2a).

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Figure 2.
a,
Performance of one subject (see Table 1, subject 2-1)
during a session of the fMRI experiment. The number of completed sets
in each trial is plotted against the serial scan number separately for
the test condition (true learning, left) and for the
control condition (pseudo learning, right). The increase
in the number of completed sets was observed both for the true-learning
and for the pseudo-learning conditions. For true learning, the eight test epochs (shaded areas) were classified into three
learning stages (see Materials and Methods). b,
Performance of one subject during a session for reaction time
measurements. The number of completed sets (top) and the
set completion time (the mean time to complete a set;
bottom) in each trial are plotted against the serial
trial number separately for the true-learning (left) and for the pseudo-learning (right) conditions.
c, Performance of one subject for true learning during
(clear area) and after (shaded area) a
session of an fMRI experiment. The number of completed sets
(top) and the set completion time
(bottom) are shown. During the fMRI experiment, the set
completion time remained ~1.0 sec, because the movement (two presses)
was paced by an auditory cue at 1 Hz. After the fMRI experiment, the
subject was asked to perform the same hyperset as quickly as possible.
The accuracy of the performance was maintained, whereas the set
completion time became as short as that for the advanced stage in the
session for reaction time measurements (see b).
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In the control condition (pseudo learning), the subjects were allowed
to press the two buttons in any order, but the correct order was
randomized for each trial, with the probability of error gradually
decreasing from the chance level. In consequence, the number of
completed sets increased similarly to the process in true learning, and
the subject "completed" the whole hyperset usually by the fourth to
the sixth control epoch (Fig. 2a, right).
Reaction time measurements
We performed an experiment for reaction time measurements as a
separate session. The subjects were asked to press buttons as quickly
as possible. The main parameter used here was set completion time,
which was the mean time required to complete a single set (i.e., time
for pressing two buttons in a set). The learning process, measured as
the number of completed sets, was similar to that observed in the fMRI
experiment (compare Fig. 2b, left, with
2a, left).
The set completion time was relatively short in the early stage of
learning (average of the first five trials for all subjects, 657 ± 83 msec) and showed a gradual increase usually until the subjects
completed the hyperset (i.e., 10 sets) for the first time (839 ± 132 msec for the average of five trials after the first completion of
the hyperset). In the intermediate stage, the set completion time
decreased gradually. In the advanced stage (when the subjects made no
errors), the set completion time remained short (662 ± 75 msec
for the first five consecutive completions of the hyperset). The
results suggested that different modes of information processing
occurred for the three learning stages. We therefore classified the
eight epochs of fMRI experiments into the three learning stages as
described in the Materials and Methods.
In pseudo learning, the subjects were allowed to press buttons in any
order (Fig. 2b, right). Although the number of
completed sets increased, the set completion time remained short
(571 ± 68 msec for the average of 20 trials), suggesting that
cognitive processes were unchanged during pseudo learning.
We considered the possibility that the characteristics of learning may
be different between the fMRI and the reaction time experiments,
depending on whether or not movements were paced. We thus asked the
subjects to perform a hyperset as quickly as possible after they had
learned the hyperset in the same way as in the fMRI experiment. We
found that they could perform the task nearly completely and quickly
(Fig. 2c). The set completion time was 626 ± 67 msec
for the average of five trials after the fMRI task procedure, which was
shorter than that for the advanced stage in the reaction time
experiment (Fig. 2b). The finding suggests that the subjects
acquired a sequential procedure during the fMRI experiment even though
they had to keep the movement rate constant.
Eye movement recording
The number of saccades exceeding 2° for every 30 sec period was
33 ± 4.9 for the true-learning and 35 ± 6.0 for the
pseudo-learning conditions. For true learning, the number was
relatively constant throughout the learning process (35 for the early
stage, 31 for the intermediate stage, and 34 for the advanced stage).
Therefore, the eye movement itself would have little effect on the
brain activation observed in the present study.
fMRI data
Identification of learning-related areas
We first identified learning-related areas by cross-correlating
all of the SI data with the reference function (Fig.
3). Among them, four areas were
consistently active across the seven subjects, as indicated by
pink circles in Figure 3. These areas were located in
the medial premotor and lateral prefrontal cortex and in the medial and
lateral parietal cortex.

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Figure 3.
Activation maps for a single representative
subject (see Table 1, subject 2-1) based on the entire
learning process. Magnetic resonance images for eight
axial slices are shown (top left to bottom
right for slices 1-8, respectively). The other two slices, top
and bottom slices, had been discarded after a motion correction. The
left in each image represents the right hemisphere.
Pixels with correlation coefficients >0.3 (corresponding to
p < 0.001) are shown in
yellow-red colors, which are indicated
by the color bar at the bottom. Areas
with prominent activation are indicated by pink circles
and include the medial premotor cortex (slice 2), the lateral
prefrontal cortex (slice 4), the medial parietal cortex (slices 4 and
5), and the lateral parietal cortex (slices 3 and 4). Additional
activation sites are found in the anterior portion of the cingulate
gyrus (slice 3) and the posterior end of the middle frontal gyrus
(slice 1).
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The activation focus in the lateral prefrontal cortex was located
in the middle frontal gyrus, which corresponded to Brodmann's area
(BA) 46 and was designated as the DLPFC (Petrides and Pandya, 1994 )
(Fig. 4). The left side was activated in
all of the seven subjects, whereas the right side was activated in five
(Table 1).

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Figure 4.
Four cortical areas related to learning. The
locations of activated areas are shown on the T1-weighted coronal
(left, pink circles) or sagittal
(right, yellow dots) structure images.
Images from three subjects (see Table 1, subjects 2-1, 3-1, and 4-1) are shown for each of the following four areas: DLPFC, pre-SMA, precuneus, and IPS. The right hemisphere is shown on the
left in each image.
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The medial premotor cortex activation was located above the cingulate
sulcus, slightly anterior to the AC with respect to the AC-PC line
(Fig. 4) (see Table 1). In the preceding paper, we have determined this
area to be the pre-SMA (Hikosaka et al., 1996 ), which was originally
described in monkeys (Tanji, 1994 ). Consistent with our previous
observation, activation of the pre-SMA was observed unilaterally, six
subjects in the left hemisphere and one in the right (Table 1).
The activation focus within the medial parietal cortex was located in
the precuneus, the medial aspect of BA 7 (Fig. 4). Bilateral activation
was observed in all subjects. Although unilateral activation of
precuneus is shown in Figure 4, activation on the other side was found
in different slices (see Fig. 3). The number of activated pixels was
significantly larger for the right hemisphere than for the left
(average for all subjects, 17 pixels for the right and 10 for the left;
p < 0.01, Student's paired t test).
The lateral parietal activation was found within the posterior portion
of the IPS (Fig. 4). Bilateral activation was observed in all subjects.
The number of activated pixels was not significantly different between
hemispheres (average for all subjects, 16 pixels for the right and 15 for the left).
The coordinates of these four areas are shown in Table 1. They were
similar across the seven subjects and were consistent across repeated
experiments for individual subjects.
Other activation foci were found within the cingulate cortex, well
anterior to the AC (observed in four subjects; slice 3 in Fig. 3),
which corresponds to the rostral cingulate area in BA 32 (Picard and
Strick, 1996 ), and within the anterior wall of the middle part of the
precentral sulcus (observed in three subjects; slice 1 in Fig. 3),
which corresponds to the frontal eye field (Paus, 1996 ). Although an
activation focus was observed within the anterior part of the insular
cortex, most of the activated pixels included the underlying
vasculatures. Therefore, the insular activation focus was not
analyzed.
Learning-related changes in signal intensity
For all of the foci described above, the mean SI was generally
higher in the test epochs than in the control epochs (Fig. 5). However, the difference in SI between
the test and the control epochs, SI, changed across the eight
alternations differently for these areas. Namely, the SI for the
left DLPFC (Lt DLPFC) and the pre-SMA was large at the beginning and
decreased toward the end, whereas that for the precuneus and the IPS
was initially small and then increased in the middle part of the
experiment.

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Figure 5.
Changes in signal intensity in the four
learning-related cortical areas during learning of a single visuomotor
sequence (plotted against the serial scan number). On the
bottom is shown the learning performance (number of
completed sets). Data are from a single subject (see Table 1, subject
2-1). Open and shaded areas correspond to
the control epochs (pseudo learning) and test epochs (true learning),
respectively, except that they have been shifted by one data point to
take account of the delayed change in blood oxygenation level. Data for
the instruction periods have been omitted.
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We found that the time courses of SI were different for different
subjects depending on their learning performance (Fig. 6). For the subject with a good
performance (Fig. 6, subject 5), the pre-SMA and precuneus
activation decreased earlier than did that in subject 2-1.
For the subject with a poor performance (Fig. 6, subject
4-2), the left DLPFC and pre-SMA activation stayed high, whereas
the precuneus and the IPS remained less activated.

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Figure 6.
Time course of signal intensity changes depends on
the learning performance. For three subjects whose learning
performances varied (bottom; number of completed sets),
SIs (i.e., test control) are plotted against the eight test
epochs (top). Data are shown individually for the four
cortical areas. The subject numbers correspond to those in Table
1.
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Learning-related changes in number of active pixels
We so far have identified learning-related areas by examining the
signal intensity data across the entire learning period. With this
method, however, areas might not have been detected that showed signal
intensity changes only during a particular learning stage. We therefore
classified the eight test epochs into three learning stages (Fig.
7, bottom) and created
activation maps for each of the three learning stages (Fig. 7).

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Figure 7.
Activation maps for the early, intermediate, and
advanced stages (the same subject analyzed in Fig. 3). Three contiguous
slices, which correspond to slices 2, 3, and 4 in Figure 3, are shown in the first to third rows, respectively.
Clusters of activated pixels are indicated by pink
circles. The learning performance of the subject (number of
completed sets), on which the determination of the three learning
stages (divided by hatched lines) was based, is shown
(bottom).
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The results were similar to those obtained by the preceding analysis
(compare Fig. 7 with Fig. 3). Activation foci (p < 0.01) were found in the left DLPFC, pre-SMA, precuneus, and IPS in
all the subjects, the right DLPFC (Rt DLPFC) in six subjects, and the
rostral cingulate area in four subjects. Of interest is the fact that
the number of activated pixels changed across the three learning
stages. The number of active pixels appears larger in the earlier
stages of learning for the left DLPFC (Fig. 7, third row) and for the pre-SMA (first
row), whereas it appears larger in the later stages of
learning for the precuneus (third row) and for the IPS
(second and third rows).
Time course of activation across learning stages
We then examined whether learning-related changes in activation
were commonly observed across subjects in terms of the SI change and in
terms of the number of activated pixels (Fig.
8). To account for the difference in the
learning performance between the subjects, we classified the eight test
epochs into three learning stages for individual subjects (see Fig. 7;
Materials and Methods).

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Figure 8.
Across-subject comparison showing the correlation
of individual cortical activation with learning stages.
a, Signal intensity changes (mean SI).
b, Number of activated pixels. For each cortical area,
data obtained from seven subjects are shown for the three learning
stages: early (left), intermediate
(center), and advanced (right) stages.
Paired comparisons were made between the learning stages using
Wilcoxon's signed rank test; significant differences (p < 0.05) are indicated by
asterisks.
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|
First, the pattern of the mean SI change was similar across subjects
but different across the brain areas (Fig. 8a). The mean
SI for the left DLPFC was highest in the early stage of learning. A
significant difference (Wilcoxon's signed rank test; p < 0.05) was observed between the early and intermediate stages and
also between the early and advanced stages. The right DLPFC was
activated in five subjects, and the mean SI was relatively higher in
the early and intermediate stages compared with that for the advanced
stage. The mean SI for the pre-SMA was higher in the early or
intermediate stage than in the advanced stage. The mean SI for the
precuneus was higher in the intermediate stage than in the early or
advanced stage. The mean SI for the IPS was higher in the
intermediate or advanced stage than in the early stage. The mean SI
for the rostral cingulate area was higher in the early and intermediate
stages than in the advanced stage.
Second, very similar time courses of activation were found in terms of
the number of activated pixels (Fig. 8b). The statistical comparison using Wilcoxon's signed rank test showed significant differences that were identical with those observed for the signal intensity data.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Frontal-to-parietal activation during visuomotor
sequence learning
We identified four cortical areas that were related to learning of
visuomotor sequences: DLPFC, pre-SMA, precuneus, and IPS. The
learning-related activation of the prefrontal and parietal areas have
been shown in previous studies (Seitz et al., 1990 ; Grafton et al.,
1992 ; Rauch et al., 1995 ; Blaxton et al., 1996 ). However, there have
been few studies that asked whether these areas were differentially
activated (see, however, Passingham et al., 1997 ).
We now demonstrate that the time course of activation was different
between these areas. The two frontal areas, DLPFC and pre-SMA, became
active in the early stage of learning, followed by activation of the
two parietal areas, precuneus and IPS, in the intermediate or advanced
stages. Recently, Shadmehr and Holcomb (1997) reported a similar
prefrontal-to-parietal transition of activation in motor memory
consolidation. These data might suggest a similarity between the neural
mechanisms for the short-term learning in our paradigm (<10 min) and
those for the long-term memory consolidation in the study of Shadmehr
and Holcomb (1997) (6 hr).
In the present study, we found that there were some differences between
the two frontal areas and the two parietal areas. The left DLPFC was
highly active in the early stage of learning, whereas the right DLPFC
and the pre-SMA were active in the early and the intermediate stages.
The precuneus and the IPS became active in the intermediate stage, but
only the IPS remained active in the advanced stage. Thus, a specific
set of brain areas was activated in each learning stage.
Possible information processes underlying the transition of
learning stages
Learning a new procedure requires attention initially, but the
procedure becomes automatic eventually. This can be viewed as a
transition from the declarative stage to the procedural stage (Fitts,
1964 ; Anderson, 1982 ). It is thought that attentive processes are
performed one at a time, whereas automatic processes are performed in
parallel (Schneider and Shiffrin, 1977 ; Kahneman and Treisman, 1984 ).
This is shown experimentally as the difference in the processing time
(typically measured as a reaction time). As the number of processed
items increases, the processing time increases for the attentive
process (Sternberg, 1966 ; Sternberg et al., 1978 ) but stays at a lower
level for the automatic process (Treisman and Gelade, 1980 ; Schneider
and Fisk, 1982 ; Fendrich et al., 1991 ).
In our behavioral experiment in which the subjects were instructed to
learn a hyperset as quickly as possible (reaction time measurements),
the processing time was represented by the set completion time. In the
early stage, it increased monotonically with the number of processed
items (sets), suggesting that the underlying processes were declarative
(attentive). The set completion time then decreased in the intermediate
stage during which the subjects tried to process all 10 items (i.e.,
sets), although sometimes without success. This suggests that the
procedural process had started to work, whereas the declarative process
was still required. The set completion time reached its lowest level in the advanced stage during which the subjects were able to process the
10 items perfectly, suggesting that the declarative process gradually
gave way to the procedural process. Thus the process of learning
involves various cognitive components that change over time. Based on
the above consideration, we suggest functional roles for the four
cortical areas.
DLPFC
The DLPFC activation was marked in the early stage, when the
declarative (attentive) process is thought to dominate. This finding is
consistent with the idea that the DLPFC is the central neural substrate
for the working-memory process (Goldman-Rakic, 1987 ; Funahashi et al.,
1989 ; Jonides et al., 1993 ; Petrides et al., 1993a ; McCarthy et al.,
1994 ), in which attentive manipulation of stored information is
necessary (Baddley, 1992 ). A similar decrease in the DLPFC activation
with learning has been shown in previous studies (Jenkins et al., 1994 ;
Shadmehr and Holcomb, 1997 ).
The prolonged activation of the right DLPFC compared with the left is
consistent with the idea that the former subserves retrieval processes,
whereas the latter subserves encoding processes (Petrides et al.,
1993b ; Shallice et al., 1994 ; Tulving et al., 1994 ; Fletcher et al.,
1995a , 1996 ).
Pre-SMA
Learning-related activation of the pre-SMA confirmed our previous
report (Hikosaka et al., 1996 ) and is consistent with the results of
single unit recordings in monkeys performing the same paradigm
(Miyashita et al., 1995 ); in the initial phase of learning, pre-SMA
neurons showed vigorous activity, which decreased dramatically as
learning proceeded. Furthermore, the reversible blockade of the pre-SMA
by muscimol injections impaired the new learning but not the
performance of well-learned sequences (Miyashita et al., 1996b ).
A functional distinction between pre-SMA and SMA proper was
proposed in experiments using monkeys (Tanji, 1994 ). Recent positron emission tomography (PET) and fMRI studies suggest that the pre-SMA is
also present in humans and is located slightly anterior to the anterior
commissure (Picard and Strick, 1996 ). Unlike the SMA proper, the
pre-SMA has been shown to be active in tasks that required selection of
actions (Deiber et al., 1991 , 1996 ; Rao et al., 1997 ), working memory
(Paulesu et al., 1993 ; Buckner et al., 1996 ), and sequential saccades
(Petit et al., 1996 ).
Our study showed that the pre-SMA, unlike the left DLPFC, remained
active in the intermediate stage during which the declarative process
was being replaced by the procedural process. This suggests that the
pre-SMA receives declarative information from the DLPFC, via
corticocortical connections (Dum and Strick, 1991 ; Matsuzaka et al.,
1992 ; Luppino et al., 1993 ), and uses it to generate a procedure for
sequential button presses.
Precuneus
The precuneus was activated preferentially in the intermediate
stage, in which the information on the whole sequence had been acquired
in working memory. This suggests that the precuneus may play a role in
retrieving the sequence from memory, as suggested by Sadato et al.
(1996) . Consistent with this idea, the precuneus has been shown to be
active in the execution of prelearned saccade sequences (Petit et al.,
1996 ) and in the navigation of familiar routes (Ghaem et al., 1997 ).
Crucial in navigation is the information on visuomotor sequences, as in
our 2 × 10 task.
The reduced precuneus activation in the advanced stage suggests that
the activation reflects declarative access to the sequence memory. This
is consistent with previous reports showing that the precuneus is
active in verbal memory tasks (Grasby et al., 1993 ; Shallice et al.,
1994 ; Buckner et al., 1996 ) and manipulation of visual imagery (Roland
and Gulyás, 1994 ; Fletcher et al., 1995b , 1996 ).
IPS
Unlike the precuneus, the IPS remained active in the advanced
stage beyond the intermediate stage. This suggests that the IPS is more
involved in the procedural process.
The IPS is thought to be part of the dorsal visual system that carries
spatial information (Ungerleider and Mishkin, 1982 ). Another aspect of
the dorsal visual system is that it is related to "intention" or
"action" rather than "perception" (Goodale and Milner, 1992 ;
Mazzoni et al., 1996 ; Snyder et al., 1997 ). Neurons in the monkey
parietal cortex including the IPS become active during manipulation of
particular objects (Taira et al., 1990 ). Lesions in the parietal cortex
are known to induce apraxia, an inability to manipulate common objects
(Heilman and Rothi, 1985 ). However, it is still unknown whether the
memories for visuomotor sequences, as implemented in our 2 × 10 task, are also stored in the IPS.
The posterior portion of IPS is related to saccadic eye movements
(Andersen and Gnadt, 1989 ; Kawashima et al., 1996 ; Petit et al., 1996 ).
Miyashita et al. (1996a) showed that anticipatory eye-hand movements
were critical for skilled performance in the 2 × 5 task, which
developed later in the long-term learning. The posterior IPS activation
would possibly reflect the process for the eye-hand coordination.
Integrated learning system
Studies from our laboratory using monkeys have shown
that the subcortical structures also participated in learning and/or memory of visuomotor sequences. Miyachi et al. (1997) showed that the
anterior part of the caudate/putamen is related to the learning of new
sequences, whereas the midposterior putamen is related to the
performance of well-learned sequences. The results were supported by a
recent PET study (Jueptner et al., 1997b ). In addition, Lu et al.
(1996) showed that the dorsal part of the dentate nucleus was important
for the storage or retrieval of long-term memories for well-learned
sequences. These studies, together with recent imaging studies
(Passingham et al., 1997 ; Shadmehr and Holcomb, 1997 ), suggest that
cerebral cortical (frontal and parietal) areas, basal ganglia, and
cerebellum all contribute to visuomotor sequence learning but with
different time courses until procedural skills are eventually stored as
long-term memories.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Oct. 16, 1997; revised Dec. 15, 1997; accepted Dec. 15, 1997.
This study was supported by the Japan Society for Promotion of Science
Research for the Future program and by the Basic Research System Core.
We are grateful to H. Imamizu and M. Kawato in the Japan Science and
Technology Corporation for their cooperation in the Talairach
registration of the functional images.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Okihide Hikosaka, Department
of Physiology, Juntendo University School of Medicine, 2-1-1 Hongo,
Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113, Japan.
 |
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