4.2 Article

Testing the co-existence of two timing strategies for motor control in a unique task: The synchronisation spatial-tapping task

Journal

HUMAN MOVEMENT SCIENCE
Volume 43, Issue -, Pages 45-60

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.humov.2015.06.009

Keywords

Timing control; Rhythmicity; Spatial control; Anchor point; Coexistence; Trajectory

Funding

  1. French national grants [ANR-2010-BLAN-1903-01, ANR-2009-CORD-014-INTERACT]
  2. University of Lille3
  3. [MESHS-USR3185]
  4. [ARCIR-Sport Plaisir-2013]

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The control of rhythmic action sequences may involve two distinct timing strategies, i.e., event-based and emergent timing, which are usually revealed through finger-tapping and circle-drawing tasks, respectively. There is a lively debate concerning the possibility of coexistence of the two modes of timing for the execution of a single task. If one considers emergent timing as simply an absence of explicit representation of a time interval, then by definition, the two modes of timing cannot coexist. However, if one considers that emergent timing engages control of another motor parameter, e.g., a control of movement through space rather than time, then the possibility of coexistence needs to be reassessed. In the present study, we designed a hybrid of finger-tapping and circle-drawing tasks for which the demands for space and time control were present at the same time in order to reassess the coexistence hypothesis. Seventy-eight participants performed a spatial-tapping task in which finger taps were to be produced in synchrony with a regular metronome to 6 visual targets presented around a virtual circle. The metronome set ten distinct tempi (1100-300 ms). Using autocorrelation analyses on timing variables, we show that motor timing was event-based at slow tempi and emergent at faster tempi. Through an analysis of the trajectory, we confirm that an increase in the spatial control of movement took place congruently with a switch from event-based to emergent timing modes. At these fast tempi, timing and spatial errors were correlated but only at the specific target location for which a dynamical anchor point was revealed. Hence, we conclude that the coding of emergent timing has a spatial nature from which emerge timing regularities. This spatio-temporal strategy insures the performance of sequential motor actions when cognitive effort is too high for the use of pure event-based timing strategies. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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