Simultaneous event-based and emergent timing: synchronization, continuation, and phase correction
- PMID: 20189907
- DOI: 10.1080/00222890903566418
Simultaneous event-based and emergent timing: synchronization, continuation, and phase correction
Abstract
It has been claimed that rhythmic tapping and circle drawing represent fundamentally different timing processes (event-based and emergent, respectively) and also that circle drawing is difficult to synchronize with a metronome and exhibits little phase correction. In the present study, musically trained participants tapped with their left hands, drew circles with their right (dominant) hands, and also performed both tasks simultaneously. In Experiment 1, they synchronized with a metronome and then continued on their own, whereas in Experiment 2, they synchronized with a metronome containing phase perturbations. Circle drawing generally exhibited reliable synchronization, although with greater variability than tapping, and also showed a clear phase-correction response that evolved gradually during the cycle immediately following a perturbation. When carried out simultaneously in synchrony, with or without a metronome, the two tasks affected each other in some ways but retained their distinctive timing characteristics. This shows that event-based and emergent timing can coexist in a dual-task situation. Furthermore, the authors argue that the two timing modes usually coexist in each individual task, although one mode is often dominant.
Comment in
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Event-based and emergent timing: dichotomy or continuum? A reply to Repp and Steinman (2010).J Mot Behav. 2011;43(4):311-8. doi: 10.1080/00222895.2011.588274. J Mot Behav. 2011. PMID: 21774607
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