Authors
Maria A Pastor, Brian L Day, Emiliano Macaluso, Karl J Friston, Richard SJ Frackowiak
Publication date
2004/3/10
Journal
Journal of Neuroscience
Volume
24
Issue
10
Pages
2585-2591
Publisher
Society for Neuroscience
Description
Two identical stimuli, such as a pair of electrical shocks to the skin, are readily perceived as two separate events in time provided the interval between them is sufficiently long. However, as they are presented progressively closer together, there comes a point when the two separate stimuli are perceived as a single stimulus. Damage to posterior parietal cortex, peri-supplementary motor area (peri-SMA), and basal ganglia can disturb this form of temporal discrimination. Our aim was to establish, in healthy subjects, the brain areas that are involved in this process. During functional magnetic resonance imaging scanning, paired electrical pulses, separated by variable inter-stimulus intervals (5-110 msec), were delivered to different sites on one forearm (8-64 mm from the midline). Subjects were required to simply detect the stimulus (control task) or to identify a stimulus property. For temporal discrimination (TD …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MA Pastor, BL Day, E Macaluso, KJ Friston… - Journal of Neuroscience, 2004