The effects of rate and sequence complexity on repetitive finger movements

被引:45
作者
Bove, Marco
Tacchino, Andrea
Novellino, Antonio
Trompetto, Carlo
Abbruzzese, Giovanni
Ghilardi, M. Felice
机构
[1] Univ Genoa, Dept Expt Med, Sect Human Physiol, I-16132 Genoa, Italy
[2] eTT, Res & Dev Unit, Genoa, Italy
[3] Univ Genoa, Dept Neurol Sci, I-16126 Genoa, Italy
[4] CUNY, Sch Med, Dept Physiol & Pharmacol, New York, NY 10031 USA
关键词
tapping; sequential movement; sensorimotor integration; timing; kinematics;
D O I
10.1016/j.brainres.2007.03.063
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 [神经生物学];
摘要
We studied the effects of movement rate and sequence complexity on the execution of externally paced finger movements. Simple thumb-index opposition movements (SEQ1), oppositions of thumb to index, medium, ring and little fingers (SEQ2), and oppositions of thumb to index, ring, medium and little fingers (SEQ3) were paced by a metronome at rates that ranged from 0.5 to 5 Hz. At rates higher than 2.5 Hz touch duration, as well as spatial and timing accuracy changed, although with a different pattern, for the sequences. Delayed movements were mostly present at lowest rates in SEQ1; at 0.5 Hz and at frequencies higher than 3.5 Hz in SEQ2; at rates higher than 3.5 Hz in SEQ3. Syncopation occurred at rates higher than 3 Hz but only for SEQ2 and SEQ3 when movements are delayed. Power spectrum analysis of timing error series indicated that SEQ1 performance is influenced by memory-related processes at all movement rates. On the other hand, for the other two sequences, at rates higher than 4 Hz the timing error series exhibit a slight but significant reduction of its long-range correlation characteristics. These findings suggest that different strategies are used for sensorimotor processing when the movement rate and sequence complexity are increased. (c) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:84 / 91
页数:8
相关论文
共 25 条
[1]
Temporal control of movements in sensorimotor synchronization [J].
Aschersleben, G .
BRAIN AND COGNITION, 2002, 48 (01) :66-79
[2]
Billon M, 1996, EXP BRAIN RES, V110, P117
[3]
Long memory processes (1/f(alpha) type) in human coordination [J].
Chen, YQ ;
Ding, MZ ;
Kelso, JAS .
PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 1997, 79 (22) :4501-4504
[4]
Origins of timing errors in human sensorimotor coordination [J].
Chen, YQ ;
Ding, MZ ;
Kelso, JAS .
JOURNAL OF MOTOR BEHAVIOR, 2001, 33 (01) :3-8
[5]
Neural correlates of the complexity of rhythmic finger tapping [J].
Dhamala, M ;
Pagnoni, G ;
Wiesenfeld, K ;
Zink, CF ;
Martin, M ;
Berns, GS .
NEUROIMAGE, 2003, 20 (02) :918-926
[6]
Statistical analysis of timing errors [J].
Ding, MZ ;
Chen, YQ ;
Kelso, JAS .
BRAIN AND COGNITION, 2002, 48 (01) :98-106
[7]
Reactions to rhythmic stimuli, with attempt to synchronize [J].
Dunlap, K .
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW, 1910, 17 (06) :399-416
[8]
A century later: Woodworth's (1899) two-component model of goal-directed aiming [J].
Elliott, D ;
Helsen, WF ;
Chua, R .
PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 2001, 127 (03) :342-357
[9]
The role of the human motor cortex in the control of complex and simple finger movement sequences [J].
Gerloff, C ;
Corwell, B ;
Chen, R ;
Hallett, M ;
Cohen, LG .
BRAIN, 1998, 121 :1695-1709
[10]
Functional coupling and regional activation of human cortical motor areas during simple, internally paced and externally paced finger movements [J].
Gerloff, C ;
Richard, J ;
Hadley, J ;
Schulman, AE ;
Honda, M ;
Hallett, M .
BRAIN, 1998, 121 :1513-1531