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J Neurophysiol (August 29, 2007). doi:10.1152/jn.00224.2007
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Submitted on March 1, 2007
Accepted on August 29, 2007

Slow brain potential and oscillatory EEG manifestations of impaired temporal preparation in Parkinson's disease

Peter Praamstra1* and Paul Pope2

1 Behavioural Brain Science Centre, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom; Dept. of Neurology, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, United Kingdom
2 Behavioural Brain Science Centre, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: p.praamstra{at}bham.ac.uk.

Performance in behavioural tasks is influenced by temporal expectations shaped by the temporal structure of the task. Such implicit temporal preparation is reflected in slow brain potentials and EEG oscillations and is attributed to interval timing mechanisms that probably depend on intact basal ganglia function. We investigated implicit timing in Parkinson disease, using a choice reaction task with two temporally regular stimulus presentation regimes, both including occasional deviant interstimulus intervals. Control subjects, but not patients, demonstrated temporal preparation in the form of an adjustment in time course of slow brain potentials to the duration of the interstimulus interval. However, in both groups timing perturbations were accompanied by a slow brain potential amplitude drop at the time of expected stimulus occurrence, demonstrating intact representation of time in patients. In patients, oscillatory activity in beta and alpha bands showed attenuated preparatory desynchronization (ERD) and reduced post-movement event-related synchronization (ERS), reflecting abnormal engagement and disengagement of sensorimotor and parietal areas. The results demonstrate profoundly deficient temporal preparation with preserved encoding of temporal information, a dissociation which may be explained by impaired dopamine-dependent motor learning. The results are discussed in the context of recent work on oscillatory activity in the basal ganglia.







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