Musical expertise generalizes to superior temporal scaling in a Morse code tapping task.

A key feature of the brain's ability to tell time and generate complex temporal patterns is its capacity to produce similar temporal patterns at different speeds. For example, humans can tie a shoe, type, or play an instrument at different speeds or tempi-a phenomenon referred to as temporal sc...

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Main Authors: Matthew A Slayton, Juan L Romero-Sosa, Katrina Shore, Dean V Buonomano, Indre V Viskontas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221000
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spelling doaj-837c1ebf455640649eb111d9faab96622021-03-03T21:20:08ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01151e022100010.1371/journal.pone.0221000Musical expertise generalizes to superior temporal scaling in a Morse code tapping task.Matthew A SlaytonJuan L Romero-SosaKatrina ShoreDean V BuonomanoIndre V ViskontasA key feature of the brain's ability to tell time and generate complex temporal patterns is its capacity to produce similar temporal patterns at different speeds. For example, humans can tie a shoe, type, or play an instrument at different speeds or tempi-a phenomenon referred to as temporal scaling. While it is well established that training improves timing precision and accuracy, it is not known whether expertise improves temporal scaling, and if so, whether it generalizes across skill domains. We quantified temporal scaling and timing precision in musicians and non-musicians as they learned to tap a Morse code sequence. We found that non-musicians improved significantly over the course of days of training at the standard speed. In contrast, musicians exhibited a high level of temporal precision on the first day, which did not improve significantly with training. Although there was no significant difference in performance at the end of training at the standard speed, musicians were significantly better at temporal scaling-i.e., at reproducing the learned Morse code pattern at faster and slower speeds. Interestingly, both musicians and non-musicians exhibited a Weber-speed effect, where temporal precision at the same absolute time was higher when producing patterns at the faster speed. These results are the first to establish that the ability to generate the same motor patterns at different speeds improves with extensive training and generalizes to non-musical domains.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221000
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthew A Slayton
Juan L Romero-Sosa
Katrina Shore
Dean V Buonomano
Indre V Viskontas
spellingShingle Matthew A Slayton
Juan L Romero-Sosa
Katrina Shore
Dean V Buonomano
Indre V Viskontas
Musical expertise generalizes to superior temporal scaling in a Morse code tapping task.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Matthew A Slayton
Juan L Romero-Sosa
Katrina Shore
Dean V Buonomano
Indre V Viskontas
author_sort Matthew A Slayton
title Musical expertise generalizes to superior temporal scaling in a Morse code tapping task.
title_short Musical expertise generalizes to superior temporal scaling in a Morse code tapping task.
title_full Musical expertise generalizes to superior temporal scaling in a Morse code tapping task.
title_fullStr Musical expertise generalizes to superior temporal scaling in a Morse code tapping task.
title_full_unstemmed Musical expertise generalizes to superior temporal scaling in a Morse code tapping task.
title_sort musical expertise generalizes to superior temporal scaling in a morse code tapping task.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description A key feature of the brain's ability to tell time and generate complex temporal patterns is its capacity to produce similar temporal patterns at different speeds. For example, humans can tie a shoe, type, or play an instrument at different speeds or tempi-a phenomenon referred to as temporal scaling. While it is well established that training improves timing precision and accuracy, it is not known whether expertise improves temporal scaling, and if so, whether it generalizes across skill domains. We quantified temporal scaling and timing precision in musicians and non-musicians as they learned to tap a Morse code sequence. We found that non-musicians improved significantly over the course of days of training at the standard speed. In contrast, musicians exhibited a high level of temporal precision on the first day, which did not improve significantly with training. Although there was no significant difference in performance at the end of training at the standard speed, musicians were significantly better at temporal scaling-i.e., at reproducing the learned Morse code pattern at faster and slower speeds. Interestingly, both musicians and non-musicians exhibited a Weber-speed effect, where temporal precision at the same absolute time was higher when producing patterns at the faster speed. These results are the first to establish that the ability to generate the same motor patterns at different speeds improves with extensive training and generalizes to non-musical domains.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221000
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