Tapping ahead of time: its association with timing variability.

Psychol Res

Department of Psychology, Sun Yat-Sen University, Higher Education Mega Center, 132 Waihuan East road, Guangzhou, 510006, Guangdong, China.

Published: March 2020

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Article Abstract

Researchers have puzzled over the phenomenon in sensorimotor timing that people tend to tap ahead of time. When synchronizing movements (e.g., finger taps) with an external sequence (e.g., a metronome), humans typically tap tens of milliseconds before event onsets, producing the elusive negative asynchrony. Here, we present 24 metronome-tapping data sets from 8 experiments with different experimental settings, showing that less negative asynchrony is associated with lower tapping variability. Further analyses reveal that this negative mean-SD correlation of asynchrony is likely to be observed for sequence types appropriate for synchronization, as indicated by the statistically negative lag 1 autocorrelation of inter-response intervals. The reported findings indicate an association between negative asynchrony and timing variability.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00426-018-1043-2DOI Listing

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