Perfect Phase Correction in Synchronization With Slow Auditory Sequences

Number 1507
Year 2008
Drawer 27
Entry Date 09/15/2008
Authors Repp, B.H.
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Publication Journal of Motor Behavior, V. 40:No.5, pp. 363-367.
url http://www.haskins.yale.edu/Reprints/HL1507.pdf
Abstract Phase correction during synchronization (finger tapping) with an isochronous auditory sequence is typically imperfect, requiring several taps to complete. However, two independent hypotheses predict that phase correction should approach perfection when the sequence tempo is slow. The present results confirm this prediction. The experiment used a phase perturbation method and a group of musically trained participants. As the sequence interonset interval increased from 300 to 1200 ms, the phase correction response to perturbations increased and approached instantaneous phase resetting between 700 and 1200 ms, depending on the individual. A possible explanation of this finding is that emergent timing of the periodic finger movement vanishes as the movement frequency decreases and thus ceases to compete with event-based timing.
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