Neuropsychological mechanisms of interval timing behavior
Read::
- Neuropsychological mechanisms of interval timing behavior Matthew S. Matell, Warren H. Meck 2000 π« 2022-08-05 reading citation Print:: β PDF:: NA Files:: Matell_Meck_2000_Neuropsychological mechanisms of interval timing behavior.pdf; Snapshot Reading Note:: Matthew S. Matell, Warren H. Meck 2000 Web Rip::
TABLE without id
file.link as "Related Files",
title as "Title",
type as "type"
FROM "" AND -"ZZ. planning"
WHERE citekey = "matellNeuropsychologicalMechanismsInterval2000"
SORT file.cday DESC
Abstract
Interval timing in the seconds-to-minutes range is believed to underlie a variety of complex behaviors in humans and other animals. One of the more interesting problems in interval timing is trying to understand how the brain times events lasting for minutes with millisecond-based neural processes. Timing models proposing the use of coincidence-detection mechanisms (e.g., the detection of simultaneous activity across multiple neural inputs) appear to be the most compatible with known neural mechanisms. From an evolutionary perspective, coincidence detection of neuronal activity may be a fundamental mechanism of timing that is expressed across a wide variety of species.
Quick Reference
Top Comments
Letβs say grey is for overall comments
Topics
Further Reading
β