RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Motor Memory Is Encoded as a Gain-Field Combination of Intrinsic and Extrinsic Action Representations JF The Journal of Neuroscience JO J. Neurosci. FD Society for Neuroscience SP 14951 OP 14965 DO 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1928-12.2012 VO 32 IS 43 A1 Jordan B. Brayanov A1 Daniel Z. Press A1 Maurice A. Smith YR 2012 UL http://www.jneurosci.org/content/32/43/14951.abstract AB Actions can be planned in either an intrinsic (body-based) reference frame or an extrinsic (world-based) frame, and understanding how the internal representations associated with these frames contribute to the learning of motor actions is a key issue in motor control. We studied the internal representation of this learning in human subjects by analyzing generalization patterns across an array of different movement directions and workspaces after training a visuomotor rotation in a single movement direction in one workspace. This provided a dense sampling of the generalization function across intrinsic and extrinsic reference frames, which allowed us to dissociate intrinsic and extrinsic representations and determine the manner in which they contributed to the motor memory for a trained action. A first experiment showed that the generalization pattern reflected a memory that was intermediate between intrinsic and extrinsic representations. A second experiment showed that this intermediate representation could not arise from separate intrinsic and extrinsic learning. Instead, we find that the representation of learning is based on a gain-field combination of local representations in intrinsic and extrinsic coordinates. This gain-field representation generalizes between actions by effectively computing similarity based on the (Mahalanobis) distance across intrinsic and extrinsic coordinates and is in line with neural recordings showing mixed intrinsic-extrinsic representations in motor and parietal cortices.