Losing the beat: deficits in temporal coordination |
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Authors: | Caroline Palmer Pascale Lidji Isabelle Peretz |
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Affiliation: | 1Department of Psychology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H3A 1B1;2Center for Research on Brain, Language and Music, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H3G 2A8;3Department of Psychology, University of Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H2V 2S9 |
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Abstract: | Tapping or clapping to an auditory beat, an easy task for most individuals, reveals precise temporal synchronization with auditory patterns such as music, even in the presence of temporal fluctuations. Most models of beat-tracking rely on the theoretical concept of pulse: a perceived regular beat generated by an internal oscillation that forms the foundation of entrainment abilities. Although tapping to the beat is a natural sensorimotor activity for most individuals, not everyone can track an auditory beat. Recently, the case of Mathieu was documented (Phillips-Silver et al. 2011 Neuropsychologia49, 961–969. (doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2011.02.002)). Mathieu presented himself as having difficulty following a beat and exhibited synchronization failures. We examined beat-tracking in normal control participants, Mathieu, and a second beat-deaf individual, who tapped with an auditory metronome in which unpredictable perturbations were introduced to disrupt entrainment. Both beat-deaf cases exhibited failures in error correction in response to the perturbation task while exhibiting normal spontaneous motor tempi (in the absence of an auditory stimulus), supporting a deficit specific to perception–action coupling. A damped harmonic oscillator model was applied to the temporal adaptation responses; the model''s parameters of relaxation time and endogenous frequency accounted for differences between the beat-deaf cases as well as the control group individuals. |
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Keywords: | entrainment temporal adaptation beat deafness synchronization endogenous frequency error correction |
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