R. Ivry, R. M. Spencer, H. N. Zelaznik, and J. Diedrichsen (2002) have proposed a distinction between timed movements in which a temporal representation is part of the task goal (event timing) and those in which timing properties are emergent. The issue addressed in the present experiment was how timing in conditions conducive to emergent timing becomes established. According to what the authors term the transformation hypothesis, timing initially requires an event-based representation when the temporal goal is defined externally (e.g., by a metronome), but over the first few movement cycles, control processes become established that allow timing to become emergent. Different groups of participants (N = 84) executed either 1 timed interval,...
Accurate timing performance during auditory–motor synchronization has been well documented for finge...
To maintain synchrony in group activities, each individual within the group must continuously correc...
The involvement or noninvolment of a clock-like neural process, an effector- independent representat...
R. Ivry, R. M. Spencer, H. N. Zelaznik, and J. Diedrichsen (2002) have proposed a distinction betwee...
An internal clock-like process has been implicated in the control of rhythmic movements performed fo...
That individual timing variability is correlated across some tasks but not others has instigated the...
Two different mechanisms for interval timing have been proposed, one requiring a cognitive represent...
Event timing refers to movements that utilize an internal clock whereas emergent timing refers to mo...
International audienceThe control of rhythmic motor sequences may involve two distinct timing proces...
It has been hypothesized that timing in tapping utilizes event timing; a clock-like process, whereas...
Differences in timing control processes between tapping and circle drawing have been extensively doc...
Synchronization of movement to a metronome is a well-studied task for both discretely and smoothly p...
Three experiments were conducted to examine whether timing processes can be shared by continuous tap...
Thesis by publication.Includes bibliographical references.Chapter 1. Introduction to timing of rhyth...
It has been suggested that the temporal control of rhythmic unimianual movements is different betwee...
Accurate timing performance during auditory–motor synchronization has been well documented for finge...
To maintain synchrony in group activities, each individual within the group must continuously correc...
The involvement or noninvolment of a clock-like neural process, an effector- independent representat...
R. Ivry, R. M. Spencer, H. N. Zelaznik, and J. Diedrichsen (2002) have proposed a distinction betwee...
An internal clock-like process has been implicated in the control of rhythmic movements performed fo...
That individual timing variability is correlated across some tasks but not others has instigated the...
Two different mechanisms for interval timing have been proposed, one requiring a cognitive represent...
Event timing refers to movements that utilize an internal clock whereas emergent timing refers to mo...
International audienceThe control of rhythmic motor sequences may involve two distinct timing proces...
It has been hypothesized that timing in tapping utilizes event timing; a clock-like process, whereas...
Differences in timing control processes between tapping and circle drawing have been extensively doc...
Synchronization of movement to a metronome is a well-studied task for both discretely and smoothly p...
Three experiments were conducted to examine whether timing processes can be shared by continuous tap...
Thesis by publication.Includes bibliographical references.Chapter 1. Introduction to timing of rhyth...
It has been suggested that the temporal control of rhythmic unimianual movements is different betwee...
Accurate timing performance during auditory–motor synchronization has been well documented for finge...
To maintain synchrony in group activities, each individual within the group must continuously correc...
The involvement or noninvolment of a clock-like neural process, an effector- independent representat...