Results 11 to 20 of about 16,683 (206)
Sensorimotor Synchronization in Healthy Aging and Neurocognitive Disorders
Sensorimotor synchronization (SMS), the coordination of physical actions in time with a rhythmic sequence, is a skill that is necessary not only for keeping the beat when making music, but in a wide variety of interpersonal contexts. Being able to attend
Andres von Schnehen +6 more
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Rate limits of sensorimotor synchronization
Empirical evidence for upper and lower rate li-mits of sensorimotor synchronization (typically, finger tapping with anauditory or visual event sequence) is reviewed. If biomechanical constraints are avoided, the upper rate limit can be as high as 8-10 Hz
Bruno H. Repp
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All-sense-all networks are suboptimal for sensorimotor synchronization. [PDF]
In human groups that seek to synchronize to a common steady beat, every member can typically perceive every other member. We question whether this naturally occurring all-sense-all condition is optimal for temporal coordination.
Arnout van de Rijt
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Pitch biases sensorimotor synchronization to auditory rhythms
Current models of rhythm perception propose that humans track musical beats using the phase, period, and amplitude of sound patterns. However, a growing body of evidence suggests that pitch can also influence the perceived timing of auditory signals.
Jesse K. Pazdera, Laurel J. Trainor
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Sensorimotor synchronization to music reduces pain
Pain-reducing effects of music listening are well-established, but the effects are small and their clinical relevance questionable. Recent theoretical advances, however, have proposed that synchronizing to music, such as clapping, tapping or dancing, has evolutionarily important social effects that are associated with activation of the endogenous ...
Lucy M. Werner +4 more
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ObjectivesThe study aims to better understand the rhythmic abilities of people who stutter and to identify which processes potentially are impaired in this population: (1) beat perception and reproduction; (2) the execution of movements, in particular ...
Anneke Slis +3 more
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Sensorimotor Synchronization Increases Groove
‘Groove’ can be understood as the (pleasurable) urge to move to music. Predictive accounts of music listening posit that groove reflects an embodied suppression of prediction errors (i.e., active inference) arising from moderate levels of complexity. Here, there are frequent prediction errors that challenge internal models of the rhythmic structure but
Connor Spiech +6 more
openaire +2 more sources
Effect of Sensory Attenuation on Cortical Movement-Related Oscillations [PDF]
This study examined the impact of induced sensory deficits on cortical, movement-related oscillations measured using electroencephalography (EEG). We hypothesized that EEG patterns in healthy subjects with induced sensory reduction would be comparable to
Lee, Joseph J., Schmit, Brian
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Intertrial auditory neural stability supports beat synchronization in preschoolers
The ability to synchronize motor movements along with an auditory beat places stringent demands on the temporal processing and sensorimotor integration capabilities of the nervous system.
Kali Woodruff Carr +3 more
doaj +1 more source
Physical and neural entrainment to rhythm: human sensorimotor coordination across tasks and effector systems. [PDF]
The human sensorimotor system can be readily entrained to environmental rhythms, through multiple sensory modalities. In this review, we provide an overview of theories of timekeeping that make this neuroentrainment possible.
Balasubramaniam, Ramesh +1 more
core +2 more sources

