Abstract
The neural underpinnings of rhythmic behavior, including music and dance, have been studied using the synchronization-continuation task (SCT), where subjects initially tap in synchrony with an isochronous metronome and then keep tapping at a similar rate via an internal beat mechanism. Here, we provide behavioral and neural evidence that supports a resetting drift-diffusion model (DDM) during SCT. Behaviorally, we show the model replicates the linear relation between the mean and standard-deviation of the intervals produced by monkeys in SCT. We then show that neural populations in the medial premotor cortex (MPC) contain an accurate trial-by-trial representation of elapsed-time between taps. Interestingly, the autocorrelation structure of the elapsed-time representation is consistent with aDDM.These results indicate thatMPChas an orderly representation of time with features characteristic of concatenatedDDMsand that this population signal can be used to orchestrate the rhythmic structure of the internally timed elements of SCT.
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Merchant, H., & Averbeck, B. B. (2017). The computational and neural basis of rhythmic timing in medial premotor cortex. Journal of Neuroscience, 37(17), 4552–4564. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0367-17.2017
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