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Title

Neural mechanisms of timing control in a coincident timing task.

Authors

Masaki, Hiroaki; Sommer, Werner; Takasawa, Noriyoshi; Yamazaki, Katuo

Abstract

Many ball sports such as tennis or baseball require precise temporal anticipation of both sensory input and motor output (i.e., receptor anticipation and effector anticipation, respectively) and close performance monitoring. We investigated the neural mechanisms underlying timing control and performance monitoring in a coincident timing task involving both types of anticipations. Peak force for two time-to-peak force (TTP) conditions-recorded with a force-sensitive key-was required to coincide with a specific position of a stimulus rotating either slow or fast on a clock face while the contingent negative variation (CNV) and the motor-elicited negativity were recorded. Absolute timing error was generally smaller for short TTP (high velocity) conditions. CNV amplitudes increased with both faster stimulus velocity and longer TTPs possibly reflecting increased motor programming efforts. In addition, the motor-elicited negativity was largest in the slow stimulus/short TTP condition, probably representing some forms of performance monitoring as well as shorter response duration. Our findings indicate that the coincident timing task is a good model for real-life situations of tool use.

Subjects

TASK performance; BALLS (Sporting goods); TENNIS; BASEBALL; TEMPORAL lobe; MOTOR ability; NEUROPSYCHOLOGY

Publication

Experimental Brain Research, 2012, Vol 218, Issue 2, p215

ISSN

0014-4819

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1007/s00221-012-3052-5

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