• Title of article

    Direct and Indirect Timing Functions in Unilateral Hemispheric Lesion

  • Author/Authors

    Hosseini ، Ali Department of Biomedical Sciences - Faculty of Pharmaceutical, Biomedical and Veterinary Sciences , Rezaei ، Sajjad Department of Psychology - Faculty of Literature and Humanities - University of Guilan , Saberi ، Alia Neurology Department - Neurosciences Research Center, Pouursina Hospital, School of Medicine - Guilan University of Medical Sciences

  • From page
    301
  • To page
    312
  • Abstract
    Introduction: The neural substrates of temporal processing are not still fully known. The majority of interval timing studies have dealt with this subject in the context of Explicit timing (computing the time intervals explicitly). The hypothesis Implicit timing (implicitly using temporal processing to improve function) has also proposed. This lesion study addressed explicit and implicit timing paradigms simultaneously using identical experimental tasks. Methods: In this casecontrol study, 15 patients with Right Hemisphere Damage (RHD) and 15 patients with Left Hemisphere Damage (LHD) and 15 agematched normal subjects were included. Participants performed a temporal reproduction task (assessing explicit timing) and a temporal prediction task (assessing implicit timing) in two sub and suprasecond intervals. Results: Our results showed that RHD can lead to significantly lower accuracy in the temporal reproduction task in subsecond (p=0.005) and suprasecond (p=0.001) intervals, compared with the normal subjects. Also, LHD led to perturbation in temporal prediction task by an increase in reaction time (lower accuracy) in sub (p=0.011) and suprasecond (p=0.006) time intervals than the normal subjects. Conclusion: Overall, our findings suggested that there is a right hemispheric bias in the neural substrate of explicit timing, in both sub and suprasecond intervals. Furthermore, for the first time in a lesion study, we showed the evidence of lefthemispheric bias in neural substrates of implicit timing.
  • Keywords
    Lesion study , Interval timing , Explicit timing , Implicit timing
  • Journal title
    Basic and Clinical Neuroscience
  • Journal title
    Basic and Clinical Neuroscience
  • Record number

    2509863