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Journal ArticleDOI

Dissociation of the lateral and medial cerebellum in movement timing and movement execution.

TLDR
It is concluded that the lateral regions of the cerebellum are critical for the accurate functioning of an internal timing system.
Abstract
In a previous study (Ivry and Keele, in press), cerebellar patients were found to be impaired on both a motor and a perceptual task which required accurate timing. This report presents case study analyses of seven patients with focal lesions in the cerebellum. The lesions were predominantly in the lateral, hemispheric regions for four of the patients. For the remaining three patients, the lesions were centered near the medial zone of the cerebellum. The clinical evaluation of the patients also was in agreement with the different lesion foci: lateral lesions primarily impaired fine motor coordination, especially apparent in movements with the distal extremities and medial lesions primarily disturbed balance and gait. All of the patients were found to have increased variability in performing rhythmic tapping when tapping with an effector (finger or foot) ipsilateral to the lesion in comparison to their performance with a contralateral effector. Separable estimates of a central timekeeper component and an implementation component were derived from the total variability scores following a model developed by Wing and Kristofferson (1973). This analysis indicated that the poor performance of patients with lateral lesions can be attributed to a deficit in the central timing process. In contrast, patients with medial lesions are able to accurately determine when to make a response, but are unable to implement the response at the desired time. A similar dissociation between the lateral and medial regions has been observed on a time perception task in patients with cerebellar atrophy. It is concluded that the lateral regions of the cerebellum are critical for the accurate functioning of an internal timing system.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Localization of cognitive operations in the human brain

TL;DR: Support for the general hypothesis that the human brain localizes mental operations of the kind posited by cognitive theories is integrated in the performance of cognitive tasks such as reading comes from studies in mental imagery, timing, and memory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Timing functions of the cerebellum

TL;DR: The results suggest that the domain of the cerebellar timing process is not limited to the motor system, but is employed by other perceptual and cognitive systems when temporally predictive computations are needed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sensorimotor synchronization: a review of the tapping literature.

TL;DR: This review summarizes theories and empirical findings obtained with the tapping task on the role of intention, rate limits, the negative mean asynchrony, variability, models of error correction, perturbation studies, neural correlates of SMS, and SMS in musical contexts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Close interrelation of motor development and cognitive development and of the cerebellum and prefrontal cortex.

Adele Diamond
- 01 Jan 2000 - 
TL;DR: While it has long been known that the striatum functions as part of a circuit with dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, it is suggested here that the same is true for the cerebellum and that it may be important for cognitive as well as motor functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

“Cognitive Dysmetria” as an Integrative Theory of Schizophrenia: A Dysfunction in Cortical-Subcortical-Cerebellar Circuitry?

TL;DR: A model that implicates connectivity among nodes located in prefrontal regions, the thalamic nuclei, and the cerebellum is developed that produces "cognitive dysmetria", difficulty in prioritizing, processing, coordinating, and responding to information in schizophrenia.
References
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Book

The cerebellum and neural control

Masao Ito
Book

Principles of Neurology

TL;DR: This book covers broad aspects of clinical neurology necessary fro clinical practice, starting from patient approach, cardinal manifestations of neurological disease, to specific neruological diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Timing functions of the cerebellum

TL;DR: The results suggest that the domain of the cerebellar timing process is not limited to the motor system, but is employed by other perceptual and cognitive systems when temporally predictive computations are needed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cerebrocerebellar communication systems.

G I Allen, +1 more
Journal ArticleDOI

Response delays and the timing of discrete motor responses

TL;DR: In this article, a model for the timing of repetitive discrete motor responses is proposed, and a prediction of negative dependency between successive interresponse intervals is confirmed by data from a Morse key tapping task.
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