Training-induced neural plasticity in golf novices

Ladina Bezzola, Susan Mérillat, Christian Gaser, Lutz Jäncke, Ladina Bezzola, Susan Mérillat, Christian Gaser, Lutz Jäncke

Abstract

Previous neuroimaging studies in the field of motor learning have shown that learning a new skill induces specific changes of neural gray and white matter in human brain areas necessary to control the practiced task. Former longitudinal studies investigating motor skill learning have used strict training protocols with little ecological validity rather than physical leisure activities, although there are several retrospective and cross-sectional studies suggesting neuroprotective effects of physical leisure activities. In the present longitudinal MRI study, we used voxel-based morphometry to investigate training-induced gray matter changes in golf novices between the age of 40 and 60 years, an age period when an active life style is assumed to counteract cognitive decline. As a main result, we demonstrate that 40 h of golf practice, performed as a leisure activity with highly individual training protocols, are associated with gray matter increases in a task-relevant cortical network encompassing sensorimotor regions and areas belonging to the dorsal stream. A new and striking result is the relationship between training intensity (time needed to complete the 40 training hours) and structural changes observed in the parieto-occipital junction. Thus, we demonstrate that a physical leisure activity induces training-dependent changes in gray matter and assume that a strict and controlled training protocol is not mandatory for training-induced adaptations of gray matter.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Gray matter increases (sagittal slices with x-coordinate value) in the golf group. 1, Central sulcus; 2, ventral premotor cortex; 3, rostral inferior parietal lobule; 4, rostral inferior parietal lobule; 5, rostral inferior parietal lobule; 6, intraparietal sulcus; 7, parieto-occipital junction; 8, caudal inferior parietal lobule; 9, caudal inferior parietal lobule. The color bar represents the threshold-free cluster enhancement statistics.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Interaction effects for changes in gray matter (GM) between the golf (black) and the control (gray) groups. CS, Central sulcus; vPMC, ventral premotor cortex; rIPL, rostral inferior parietal lobule; IPS, intraparietal sulcus; cIPL, caudal inferior parietal lobule. Error bars represent 1 SE. The indices 1–9 relate to the numbers used in Figure 1 and Table 1.
Figure 3.
Figure 3.
Correlation of gray matter percentage increase in the POJ and TI. Filled dots represent golf participants who passed the basic entrance examination within the study period.

Source: PubMed

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