One Tap at a Time: Correlating Sensorimotor Synchronization with Brain Signatures of Temporal Processing

Author:

D’Andrea-Penna Gina M1ORCID,Iversen John R2,Chiba Andrea A13,Khalil Alexander K24,Minces Victor H3

Affiliation:

1. Neurosciences Graduate Program, UC San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA

2. Institute for Neural Computation, UC San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA

3. Department of Cognitive Science, UC San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA

4. School of Film, Music, and Theatre, University College Cork, Cork, T23 HF50, Ireland

Abstract

Abstract The ability to integrate our perceptions across sensory modalities and across time, to execute and coordinate movements, and to adapt to a changing environment rests on temporal processing. Timing is essential for basic daily tasks, such as walking, social interaction, speech and language comprehension, and attention. Impaired temporal processing may contribute to various disorders, from attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and schizophrenia to Parkinson’s disease and dementia. The foundational importance of timing ability has yet to be fully understood; and popular tasks used to investigate behavioral timing ability, such as sensorimotor synchronization (SMS), engage a variety of processes in addition to the neural processing of time. The present study utilizes SMS in conjunction with a separate passive listening task that manipulates temporal expectancy while recording electroencephalographic data. Participants display a larger N1-P2 evoked potential complex to unexpected beats relative to temporally predictable beats, a differential we call the timing response index (TRI). The TRI correlates with performance on the SMS task: better synchronizers show a larger brain response to unexpected beats. The TRI, derived from the perceptually driven N1-P2 complex, disentangles the perceptual and motor components inherent in SMS and thus may serve as a neural marker of a more general temporal processing.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Temporal Dynamics of Learning Center

IBM Cognitive Horizons award to University of California

Artificial Intelligence for Healthy Living Center

National Institute of Mental Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

Reference38 articles.

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