Literature DB >> 9869707

Coupled temporal memories in Parkinson's disease: a dopamine-related dysfunction.

C Malapani1, B Rakitin, R Levy, W H Meck, B Deweer, B Dubois, J Gibbon.   

Abstract

Dysfunction of the basal ganglia and the brain nuclei interconnected with them leads to disturbances of movement and cognition, including disordered timing of movement and perceptual timing deficits. Patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) were studied in temporal reproduction tasks. We examined PD patients when brain dopamine (DA) transmission was impaired (OFF state) and when DA transmission was reestablished, at the time of maximal clinical benefit following administration of levodopa + apomorphine (ON state). Patients reproduced target times of 8 and 21 sec trained in blocked trials with the peak interval procedure, which were veridical in the ON state, comparable to normative performance by healthy young and aged controls (Experiment 1). In the OFF state, temporal reproduction was impaired in both accuracy and precision (variance). The 8-sec signal was reproduced as longer and the 21-sec signal was reproduced as shorter than they actually were (Experiment 1). This "migration" effect was dependent upon training of two different durations. When PD patients were trained on 21 sec only (Experiment 2), they showed a reproduction error in the long direction, opposite to the error produced under the dual training condition of Experiment 1. The results are discussed as a mutual attraction between temporal processing systems, in memory and clock stages, when dopaminergic regulation in the striatum is dysfunctional.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9869707     DOI: 10.1162/089892998562762

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci        ISSN: 0898-929X            Impact factor:   3.225


  113 in total

1.  ERPs and PET analysis of time perception: spatial and temporal brain mapping during visual discrimination tasks.

Authors:  V Pouthas; L Garnero; A M Ferrandez; B Renault
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2000-06       Impact factor: 5.038

Review 2.  Neuroanatomical and neurochemical substrates of timing.

Authors:  Jennifer T Coull; Ruey-Kuang Cheng; Warren H Meck
Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology       Date:  2010-07-28       Impact factor: 7.853

3.  The neural substrate of predictive motor timing in spinocerebellar ataxia.

Authors:  Martin Bares; Ovidiu V Lungu; Tao Liu; Tobias Waechter; Christopher M Gomez; James Ashe
Journal:  Cerebellum       Date:  2011-06       Impact factor: 3.847

4.  Time perception impairment in early-to-moderate stages of Huntington's disease is related to memory deficits.

Authors:  Stefania Righi; Luca Galli; Marco Paganini; Elisabetta Bertini; Maria Pia Viggiano; Silvia Piacentini
Journal:  Neurol Sci       Date:  2015-08-23       Impact factor: 3.307

5.  Variability in interval production is due to timing-dependent deficits in Huntington's disease.

Authors:  Ashwini K Rao; Karen S Marder; Jasim Uddin; Brian C Rakitin
Journal:  Mov Disord       Date:  2014-08-22       Impact factor: 10.338

6.  Neural network involved in time perception: an fMRI study comparing long and short interval estimation.

Authors:  Viviane Pouthas; Nathalie George; Jean-Baptiste Poline; Micha Pfeuty; Pierre-François Vandemoorteele; Laurent Hugueville; Anne-Marie Ferrandez; S Lehéricy; Denis Lebihan; Bernard Renault
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2005-08       Impact factor: 5.038

7.  Differential effects of clozapine and haloperidol on interval timing in the supraseconds range.

Authors:  Christopher J MacDonald; Warren H Meck
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  2005-10-19       Impact factor: 4.530

Review 8.  The role of information processing between the brain and peripheral physiological systems in pacing and perception of effort.

Authors:  Alan St Clair Gibson; Estelle V Lambert; Laurie H G Rauch; Ross Tucker; Denise A Baden; Carl Foster; Timothy D Noakes
Journal:  Sports Med       Date:  2006       Impact factor: 11.136

9.  Oxycodone lengthens reproductions of suprasecond time intervals in human research volunteers.

Authors:  Cynthia M Gooch; Brian C Rakitin; Ziva D Cooper; Sandra D Comer; Peter D Balsam
Journal:  Behav Pharmacol       Date:  2011-08       Impact factor: 2.293

Review 10.  Temporal memory averaging and post-encoding alterations in temporal expectation.

Authors:  Matthew S Matell; Alexandra M Henning
Journal:  Behav Processes       Date:  2013-02-27       Impact factor: 1.777

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