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Order effects in response times of parkinsonian patients and normal controls.

Response latencies were measured in 6 parkinsonian patients and 6 normal
subjects in a choice reaction task requiring the discrimination of two
different tones with different probabilities of occurrence (frequent and
rare).

Response latency was measured from stimulus onset to onset of
electromyographic activity in the responding muscle.

Rare-tone responses were separated on the basis of the number of frequent
tones intervening between the rare tone of interest and the immediately
preceding rare tone (defined as rare-tone position).

Frequent-tone responses were separated by the number of consecutive
frequent tones occurring either before or after a rare tone (defined as
frequent-tone position).

Rare- and frequent-tone position had a significant impact on response latency.

Both patients and controls had the shortest response latencies to rare
tones when four frequent tones (the median interval for these experiments)
intervened.

Similarly, the response latency to frequent tones increased at
approximately this same median interval after a rare event for both
patients and controls.

These findings suggest that normal controls utilize probability information
about both global probabilities and their immediate past experience in
order to modify upcoming responses.

Our findings also indicate that patients with Parkinson's disease do not
differ from normal subjects in this regard, and thus that even subtle
attributes of preprogramming are not affected in Parkinson's disease,
despite suggestions by others to the contrary.


Muscle Nerve 1999 May;22(5):567-72
Goodin DS, Aminoff MJ, Kutukcu Y, Marks WJ Jr
School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco 94143, USA.
PMID: 10331354, UI: 99260197

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PubMed/

janet paterson
52 now / 41 dx / 37 onset
snail-mail: PO Box 171  Almonte  Ontario  K0A 1A0  Canada
website: a new voice <http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Village/6263/>
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