Instituto de Neurobiología, UNAM, Campus Juriquilla, Boulevard Juriquilla No. 3001, Querétaro, 76230, Mexico,
Adv Exp Med Biol. 2014;829:1-13. doi: 10.1007/978-1-4939-1782-2_1.
Time is a fundamental variable that organisms must quantify in order to survive. In humans, for example, the gradual development of the sense of duration and rhythm is an essential skill in many facets of social behavior such as speaking, dancing to-, listening to- or playing music, performing a wide variety of sports, and driving a car (Merchant H, Harrington DL, Meck WH. Annu Rev Neurosci. 36:313-36, 2013). During the last 10 years there has been a rapid growth of research on the neural underpinnings of timing in the subsecond and suprasecond scales, using a variety of methodological approaches in the human being, as well as in varied animal and theoretical models. In this introductory chapter we attempt to give a conceptual framework that defines time processing as a family of different phenomena. The brain circuits and neural underpinnings of temporal quantification seem to largely depend on its time scale and the sensorimotor nature of specific behaviors. Therefore, we describe the main time scales and their associated behaviors and show how the perception and execution of timing events in the subsecond and second scales may depend on similar or different neural mechanisms.
时间是生物体为了生存必须量化的基本变量。例如,在人类中,对持续时间和节奏的感知的逐渐发展是许多社会行为方面的重要技能,例如说话、跳舞、听音乐、演奏各种音乐、进行各种运动以及驾驶汽车 (Merchant H, Harrington DL, Meck WH. Annu Rev Neurosci. 36:313-36, 2013)。在过去的 10 年中,使用人类以及各种动物和理论模型中的各种方法学方法,对亚秒和超秒范围内的计时的神经基础进行了快速的研究。在这篇介绍性的章节中,我们试图给出一个概念框架,将时间处理定义为一组不同的现象。时间量化的大脑回路和神经基础似乎在很大程度上取决于其时间尺度和特定行为的感觉运动性质。因此,我们描述了主要的时间尺度及其相关行为,并展示了如何在亚秒和秒的尺度上感知和执行时间事件可能取决于相似或不同的神经机制。