Motor adaptation
Motor adaptation, a form of motor learning, is the process of acquiring and restoring locomotor patterns through an error-driven learning process.
This type of adaptation is context-dependent and hence, is specific to the environment in which the adaptation occurred. The Central nervous system, particularly the cerebellum, underlies this form of adaptation in vertebrates. It is suggested that the nervous system learns to predict and cancel effects of a novel environment, returning movements to near baseline conditions. During motor adaptation the nervous system constantly uses error information to improve future movements.
Split-Belt Adaptation
Split-belt adaptation is a sub-type of motor adaptation in which the limbs on each side of the animal's body are driven at different speeds. This is achieved through the use of a split-belt treadmill that consists of two independently controlled treadmill belts. Animals undergoing split-belt adaptation adjust their interlimb coordination pattern to regain overall gait symmetry. Split-belt adaptation has a notable after-effect period in which the interlimb coordination pattern remains altered from that during the pre-adaptation period for some time after the split-belt perturbation period.The after-effect, however, is context-dependent and therefore, will only exist in the same locomotor environment in which the adaptation had occurred. Moreover, split-belt adaptation has spatial and temporal components that are dissociable at the behavioral and circuit level. The adaptation rates of the two components are different where the adaptation of the temporal component is faster than that of spatial component.
In vertebrates, the cerebellum is suggested to facilitate split-belt adaptation, and in mice, the interposed cerebellar nucleus is particularly crucial for this form of adaptation. Additionally, somatomotor regions of cerebral cortex in mice are shown to be not involved in split-belt adaptation. The split-belt adaptation paradigm is clinically important for aiding in the adjustment or recovery of impaired limb coordination patterns resulting from injury or pathologies, as well as understanding the specific aspects of gait that are disrupted in gait pathologies.