Publication | Closed Access
Dissociation of explicit and implicit timing in repetitive tapping and drawing movements.
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Citations
29
References
2002
Year
Auditory ImageryMotor SkillNeurolinguisticsCognitionMotor ControlTemporal ProcessesExplicit TimingSocial SciencesKinesiologyCognitive NeuroscienceMultisensory IntegrationMotor BehaviorGesture ProcessingHealth SciencesImplicit TimingCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesBehavioral NeuroscienceRepetitive TappingExperimental PsychologyPerception-action LoopSensorimotor TransformationMotor Behavior ControlHuman MovementSpeech PerceptionExplicit Temporal RepresentationTime Perception
Four experiments explored the hypothesis that temporal processes may be represented and controlled explicitly or implicitly. Tasks hypothesized to require explicit timing were duration discrimination, tapping, and intermittent circle drawing. In contrast, it was hypothesized that timing control during continuous circle drawing does not rely on an explicit temporal representation; rather, temporal control is an emergent property of other control processes (i.e., timing is controlled implicitly). Temporal consistency on the tapping and intermittent drawing tasks was related, and performance on both of these tasks was correlated with temporal acuity on an auditory duration discrimination task. However, timing variability of these 3 tasks was not correlated with timing variability of continuous circle drawing. These results support the hypothesized distinction between explicit and implicit temporal representations.
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