| Literature DB >> 24131660 |
Marina Lucas, Fernanda Chaves, Silmar Teixeira, Diana Carvalho, Caroline Peressutti, Juliana Bittencourt, Bruna Velasques, Manuel Menéndez-González, Mauricio Cagy, Roberto Piedade, Antonio Egidio Nardi, Sergio Machado, Pedro Ribeiro, Oscar Arias-Carrión1.
Abstract
It is well known that perception and estimation of time are fundamental for the relationship between humans and their environment. However, this temporal information processing is inefficient in patients with Parkinson' disease (PD), resulting in temporal judgment deficits. In general, the pathophysiology of PD has been described as a dysfunction in the basal ganglia, which is a multisensory integration station. Thus, a deficit in the sensorimotor integration process could explain many of the Parkinson symptoms, such as changes in time perception. This physiological distortion may be better understood if we analyze the neurobiological model of interval timing, expressed within the conceptual framework of a traditional information-processing model called "Scalar Expectancy Theory". Therefore, in this review we discuss the pathophysiology and sensorimotor integration process in PD, the theories and neural basic mechanisms involved in temporal processing, and the main clinical findings about the impact of time perception in PD.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24131660 PMCID: PMC3856585 DOI: 10.1186/1755-7682-6-39
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Arch Med ISSN: 1755-7682
Summary of studies investigating the impact of time perception on sensorimotor integration in PD
| 12 | fMRI | Sequential movement with the right hand; induced a clear activation in areas involved in motor execution and programming. | Subcortical putaminal dopamine deficit modifies cortical motor pathways in Parkinson and induces a underactivation of the rostral SMA and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. | |
| 15 | fMRI | Auditory time estimation task and frequency discrimination as an active control task. | Central processing of temporal information associated with basal ganglia activity. Temporal information processing in the brain might thus be a distributed process of interaction between modality-dependent sensory cortical function and attention and memory. | |
| 14 | fMRI | Simple detect the stimulus (control task) or to identify a stimulus property. | Pre-SMA and anterior cingulate were activated. Fronto-medial structures, directly and broadly connected with sensory and motor cortical areas of both hemispheres, as well as subcortical regions. | |
| 14 | fMRI | Four conditions: synchronized pacing, synchronized continuation, syncopated pacing, and syncopated continuation. | Neural activity underlying continuation does not generalize across all timing contexts but is strongly influenced by the prior pacing context. | |
| 46 | Temporal accuracy | Temporal tasks, reproduction and production of duration in two conditions: control counting and concurrent reading. | The relationship between time estimation and cognitive functions – processing speed and memory – depend on the context in which duration is evaluated. | |
| 10 | EEG | Choice reaction task with two different, temporally regular stimulus presentation regimes. | Interval timing for different behaviors relies on qualitatively similar mechanisms implemented in distinct cortical substrates. | |
| 13 | fMRI | Six blocks of eight preference judgment trials each. On each trial, subjects were presented with a choice between a future and an immediate reward. | The striatum is critical for processing the magnitude of an option’s value over time. Inferior frontal activation pattern was associated with more consistent temporal discounting performance over time. | |
| 21 | EEG | Subjects performed a visuospatial memory task. | Patients with Parkinson’s disease showed impairment at filtering out distracters, and they were able to hold fewer items in memory than control subjects. This indicates that the basal ganglia help controlling access to working memory. | |
| 30 | NART and fMRI. | Subjects were tested on a discrimination paradigm. | Parkinson patients are specifically less able in processing beat-based sequences compared to non-beat-based ones. The basal ganglia and the medial pre-motor system therefore appear to be necessary for processing rhythms. |
Legend: EEG = electroencephalography; fMRI = functional magnetic resonance imaging; MRI = magnetic resonance imaging; NART = National Adult Reading Test.