Chen Yin-Hua, Cesari Paola
Research Center for Mind, Brain and Learning, National Chengchi University, Taipei City, Taiwan, and the Dept. of Neurological and Movement Sciences, University of Verona, Verona, Italy.
Motor Control. 2015 Jan;19(1):90-101. doi: 10.1123/mc.2013-0081. Epub 2014 Jul 15.
Evaluating time properly is crucial for everyday activities from fundamental behaviors to refined coordinative movements such as in sport playing. Lately the concept of the existence of a unique internal clock for evaluating time in different scales has been challenged by recent neurophysiology studies. Here we provide evidence that individuals evaluate time durations below and above a second based on two different internal clocks for sub- and suprasecond time ranges: a faster clock for the subsecond range and a slower one for suprasecond time. Interestingly, the level of precision presented by these two clocks can be finely tuned through long-term sport training: Elite athletes, independently from their sport domains, generate better time estimates than nonathletes by showing higher accuracy and lower variability, particularly for subsecond time. We interpret this better time estimation in the short durations as being due to their extraordinary perceptual and motor ability in fast actions.
正确评估时间对于从基本行为到精细协调运动(如体育运动)等日常活动至关重要。最近,关于存在一个用于在不同尺度上评估时间的独特内部时钟的概念受到了近期神经生理学研究的挑战。在这里,我们提供证据表明,个体基于用于亚秒和超秒时间范围的两个不同内部时钟来评估低于和高于一秒的持续时间:一个用于亚秒范围的更快时钟和一个用于超秒时间的较慢时钟。有趣的是,这两个时钟呈现的精确程度可以通过长期体育训练进行微调:精英运动员,无论其运动领域如何,通过表现出更高的准确性和更低的变异性,比非运动员能做出更好的时间估计,特别是对于亚秒时间。我们将这种在短持续时间内更好的时间估计解释为是由于他们在快速动作中具有非凡的感知和运动能力。