Pathophysiological distortions in time perception and timed performance

Read::

TABLE without id
file.link as "Related Files",
title as "Title",
type as "type"
FROM "" AND -"ZZ. planning"
WHERE citekey = "allmanPathophysiologicalDistortionsTime2012" 
SORT file.cday DESC

Abstract

Distortions in time perception and timed performance are presented by a number of different neurological and psychiatric conditions (e.g. Parkinson’s disease, schizophrenia, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and autism). As a consequence, the primary focus of this review is on factors that define or produce systematic changes in the attention, clock, memory and decision stages of temporal processing as originally defined by Scalar Expectancy Theory. These findings are used to evaluate the Striatal Beat Frequency Theory, which is a neurobiological model of interval timing based upon the coincidence detection of oscillatory processes in corticostriatal circuits that can be mapped onto the stages of information processing proposed by Scalar Timing Theory.

Quick Reference

==In this sense, the timekeeper of the striatal beat frequency model is not a ā€˜dedicated’ clock in that it makes use of neural processes that are coding other aspects of the stimulus, including basic working memory processes (LustigĀ et al., 2005).== - See Appendix I for description of SBF

Top Comments

Let’s say grey is for overall comments

Tasks

Topics

Further Reading

—

Extracted Annotations and Comments

Figures