4.6 Article

Time Distortion in Parkinsonism

期刊

FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE
卷 15, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2021.648814

关键词

time perception; Parkinson’ s disease; basal ganglia; dopamine; progressive supranuclear palsy

资金

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology of Japan [18H05523, 19K17046]
  2. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan [25293206, 15H05881, 16H05322, 18K10821]
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [25293206, 18K10821, 15H05881, 16H05322, 19K17046] Funding Source: KAKEN

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that time production/reproduction tasks in PD and PSP patients showed unusual time perception compared to normal subjects, while perceptual tasks showed changes in the opposite direction to motor timing tasks. This suggests that timing performance in PD may be influenced by complex interactions among time scales on the motor and sensory sides, and by their distortion in memory.
Although animal studies and studies on Parkinson's disease (PD) suggest that dopamine deficiency slows the pace of the internal clock, which is corrected by dopaminergic medication, timing deficits in parkinsonism remain to be characterized with diverse findings. Here we studied patients with PD and progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), 3-4 h after drug intake, and normal age-matched subjects. We contrasted perceptual (temporal bisection, duration comparison) and motor timing tasks (time production/reproduction) in supra- and sub-second time domains, and automatic versus cognitive/short-term memory-related tasks. Subjects were allowed to count during supra-second production and reproduction tasks. In the time production task, linearly correlating the produced time with the instructed time showed that the subjective sense of 1 s is slightly longer in PD and shorter in PSP than in normals. This was superposed on a prominent trend of underestimation of longer (supra-second) durations, common to all groups, suggesting that the pace of the internal clock changed from fast to slow as time went by. In the time reproduction task, PD and, more prominently, PSP patients over-reproduced shorter durations and under-reproduced longer durations at extremes of the time range studied, with intermediate durations reproduced veridically, with a shallower slope of linear correlation between the presented and produced time. In the duration comparison task, PD patients overestimated the second presented duration relative to the first with shorter but not longer standard durations. In the bisection task, PD and PSP patients estimated the bisection point (BP50) between the two supra-second but not sub-second standards to be longer than normal subjects. Thus, perceptual timing tasks showed changes in opposite directions to motor timing tasks: underestimating shorter durations and overestimating longer durations. In PD, correlation of the mini-mental state examination score with supra-second BP50 and the slope of linear correlation in the reproduction task suggested involvement of short-term memory in these tasks. Dopamine deficiency didn't correlate significantly with timing performances, suggesting that the slowed clock hypothesis cannot explain the entire results. Timing performance in PD may be determined by complex interactions among time scales on the motor and sensory sides, and by their distortion in memory.

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