Publication | Open Access
Neurobiology of perceptual and motor timing in children with spina bifida in relation to cerebellar volume
73
Citations
41
References
2004
Year
NeuropsychologyDevelopmental Cognitive NeuroscienceMotor ControlMature BrainMotor DifficultySocial SciencesCerebellar VolumeSpina BifidaNeurologyMotor TimingCognitive NeuroscienceMotor DisorderHealth SciencesNeuropsychological FunctioningRehabilitationNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyMotor SystemNeuroscienceImmature BrainCentral Nervous SystemSpeech Perception
The cerebellum is important for perceptual and motor timing in the mature brain, but the timing function of the cerebellum in the immature brain is less well understood. We investigated timing in children with spina bifida meningomyelocele (SB), a neural tube defect that involves cerebellar dysgenesis, and in age-matched controls. Specifically, we studied perceptual timing (judgements of 400 ms duration) and motor timing (isochronous motor tapping); measured cerebellar volumes; and related perceptual and motor timing to each other and to cerebellar volume measurements. Children with SB had impairments in the perception of duration (around 400 ms) but not frequency (around 3000 Hz), showing that their perceptual timing deficit was not a generalized auditory impairment. Children with SB had motor timing deficits on unpaced but not paced isochronous tapping, and their unpaced timing performance was associated with clock variance rather than with motor implementation. Perceptual and motor timing were correlated, suggesting that children with SB have impairments in a central timing mechanism. Children with SB, especially those with upper spinal cord lesions, had significant cerebellar volume reductions in grey and white matter, as well as different regional patterns of grey matter, white matter and CSF. Duration perception was correlated with cerebellar volumes, and the number of valid tapping trials was correlated with cerebellar volumes in the SB group, which data demonstrate structure-function relations between timing and cerebellar volumes.
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