Department of Neurobiology, University of California Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Front Integr Neurosci. 2011 Oct 13;5:61. doi: 10.3389/fnint.2011.00061. eCollection 2011.
Our ability to generate well-timed sequences of movements is critical to an array of behaviors, including the ability to play a musical instrument or a video game. Here we address two questions relating to timing with the goal of better understanding the neural mechanisms underlying temporal processing. First, how does accuracy and variance change over the course of learning of complex spatiotemporal patterns? Second, is the timing of sequential responses most consistent with starting and stopping an internal timer at each interval or with continuous timing? To address these questions we used a psychophysical task in which subjects learned to reproduce a sequence of finger taps in the correct order and at the correct times - much like playing a melody at the piano. This task allowed us to calculate the variance of the responses at different time points using data from the same trials. Our results show that while "standard" Weber's law is clearly violated, variance does increase as a function of time squared, as expected according to the generalized form of Weber's law - which separates the source of variance into time-dependent and time-independent components. Over the course of learning, both the time-independent variance and the coefficient of the time-dependent term decrease. Our analyses also suggest that timing of sequential events does not rely on the resetting of an internal timer at each event. We describe and interpret our results in the context of computer simulations that capture some of our psychophysical findings. Specifically, we show that continuous timing, as opposed to "reset" timing, is consistent with "population clock" models in which timing emerges from the internal dynamics of recurrent neural networks.
我们生成适时运动序列的能力对于一系列行为至关重要,包括演奏乐器或视频游戏的能力。在这里,我们解决了与计时相关的两个问题,旨在更好地理解时间处理的神经机制。首先,在学习复杂时空模式的过程中,准确性和方差如何随时间变化?其次,顺序响应的定时最符合在每个间隔内启动和停止内部定时器还是连续定时?为了解决这些问题,我们使用了一种心理物理学任务,在该任务中,受试者学习按正确的顺序和正确的时间重现手指敲击序列 - 就像在钢琴上演奏旋律一样。这项任务允许我们使用相同试验的数据来计算不同时间点的响应方差。我们的结果表明,虽然“标准”韦伯定律显然被违反,但方差确实随时间的平方而增加,这与广义韦伯定律一致 - 将方差的来源分为与时间相关和与时间无关的成分。在学习过程中,与时间无关的方差和与时间相关项的系数都减小。我们的分析还表明,顺序事件的定时不依赖于每个事件时内部定时器的重置。我们在计算机模拟的背景下描述和解释我们的结果,这些模拟捕捉到了我们的一些心理物理学发现。具体来说,我们表明,与“重置”定时相反,连续定时与“群体时钟”模型一致,其中定时源自递归神经网络的内部动态。