Bieńkiewicz Marta M N, Craig Cathy M
ISM, Faculté des Sciences du Sport, Université d'Aix-Marseille , Marseille , France.
School of Psychology, Queen's University Belfast , Belfast , UK.
Front Neurol. 2015 Nov 27;6:249. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2015.00249. eCollection 2015.
There is lack of consistent evidence as to how well PD patients are able to accurately time their movements across space with an external acoustic signal. For years, research based on the finger-tapping paradigm, the most popular paradigm for exploring the brain's ability to time movement, has provided strong evidence that patients are not able to accurately reproduce an isochronous interval [i.e., Ref. (1)]. This was undermined by Spencer and Ivry (2) who suggested a specific deficit in temporal control linked to emergent, rhythmical movement not event-based actions, which primarily involve the cerebellum. In this study, we investigated motor timing of seven idiopathic PD participants in event-based sensorimotor synchronization task. Participants were asked to move their finger horizontally between two predefined target zones to synchronize with the occurrence of two sound events at two time intervals (1.5 and 2.5 s). The width of the targets and the distance between them were manipulated to investigate impact of accuracy demands and movement amplitude on timing performance. The results showed that participants with PD demonstrated specific difficulties when trying to accurately synchronize their movements to a beat. The extent to which their ability to synchronize movement was compromised was found to be related to the severity of PD, but independent of the spatial constraints of the task.
关于帕金森病(PD)患者能够在多大程度上借助外部声学信号精确地在空间中对其动作进行计时,目前尚无一致的证据。多年来,基于手指敲击范式(探索大脑动作计时能力最常用的范式)的研究提供了有力证据,表明患者无法精确再现等时间隔[即参考文献(1)]。但斯宾塞和伊夫里(2)对此提出了质疑,他们认为时间控制方面的特定缺陷与突发的、有节奏的动作相关,而非基于事件的动作,后者主要涉及小脑。在本研究中,我们调查了7名特发性帕金森病参与者在基于事件的感觉运动同步任务中的运动计时情况。参与者被要求在两个预定义的目标区域之间水平移动手指,以与两个声音事件在两个时间间隔(1.5秒和2.5秒)出现时同步。对目标的宽度及其之间的距离进行了调整,以研究准确性要求和动作幅度对计时表现的影响。结果显示,帕金森病患者在试图将动作精确同步到节拍时表现出特定困难。发现他们动作同步能力受损的程度与帕金森病的严重程度相关,但与任务的空间限制无关。