Abstract

Timing of sequential movements is altered in Parkinson disease (PD). Whether timing deficits in internally generated sequential movements in PD depends also on difficulties in motor planning, rather than merely on a defective ability to materially perform the planned movement is still undefined. To unveil this issue, we adopted a modified version of an established test for motor timing, i.e. the synchronization–continuation paradigm, by introducing a motor imagery task. Motor imagery is thought to involve mainly processes of movement preparation, with reduced involvement of end-stage movement execution-related processes. Fourteen patients with PD and twelve matched healthy volunteers were asked to tap in synchrony with a metronome cue (SYNC) and then, when the tone stopped, to keep tapping, trying to maintain the same rhythm (CONT-EXE) or to imagine tapping at the same rhythm, rather than actually performing it (CONT-MI). We tested both a sub-second and a supra-second inter-stimulus interval between the cues. Performance was recorded using a sensor-engineered glove and analyzed measuring the temporal error and the interval reproduction accuracy index. PD patients were less accurate than healthy subjects in the supra-second time reproduction task when performing both continuation tasks (CONT-MI and CONT-EXE), whereas no difference was detected in the synchronization task and on all tasks involving a sub-second interval. Our findings suggest that PD patients exhibit a selective deficit in motor timing for sequential movements that are separated by a supra-second interval and that this deficit may be explained by a defect of motor planning. Further, we propose that difficulties in motor planning are of a sufficient degree of severity in PD to affect also the motor performance in the supra-second time reproduction task.

Highlights

  • The subjective representation of the passage of time is critical for a variety of motor activities

  • A significant effect of TASK was detected in both groups (F[2,48]= 24.93; p< 0.001); there was a larger temporal error in the CONT-MI compared to the synchrony with a metronome cue (SYNC) (p

  • We adopted a modified synchronizationcontinuation task in order to investigate whether motor timing deficits in sequential movements in Parkinson’s disease depend on difficulties in motor planning or on the ability to implement the motor plan when subjects materially execute sequential finger opposition movements

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Summary

Introduction

The subjective representation of the passage of time is critical for a variety of motor activities. When planning a complex motor action, the central nervous system should execute an accurate integration of temporal as well as spatial information. The basal ganglia and their associated subcortical dopaminergic system play a crucial role acting as a hypothetical “internal clock” that beats the rhythm when the movement is internally generated [5,6]. The role of the basal ganglia in timing is relevant to individuals with idiopathic Parkinson’s disease (PD), who exhibit temporal processing deficits [5,7] that may contribute to the breakdown in the spatiotemporal patterning of movements. Bradykinesia (slowness of movement initiation and execution), a cardinal symptom of PD, is evident for internally generated sequential movements, and can benefit from the introduction of external rhythmic cues [8,9,10]

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