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MENTAL TIMING THEORY

 

Michael D. Mauk and Dean V. Buonomano. The Neural Basis of Temporal Processing. (2004). Houston Medical School, Houston, University of California, Los Angeles. Annual Revue Neuroscience, 27, 307–40.

Smadar Birnboim. (2003). The Automatic and Controlled Information-Processing Dissociation: Is It Still Relevant? University of Haifa. Neuropsychology Review, 13(1) 19-31.

Katya Rubia and Anna Smith. (2004). The neural correlates of cognitive time management: a review. Institute of Psychiatry, London. Acta Neurobiol Experimentals, 64, 329-340.

Penelope A. Lewis and Vincent Walsh. (2005). Time Perception: Components of the Brain’s Clock. Institute of Science and Culture, Wellington, New Zealand. University College London. Current Biology, 15(10), R389-R391.

Mingzhou Ding, Yanqing Chen, and J. A. Scott Kelso. (2002). Statistical Analysis of Timing Errors. Florida Atlantic University. Brain and Cognition 48, 98 – 106.

Dr. Penny Lewis. (2006). Emotion, memory, and the perception of time. The University of Liverpool. Unpublished White Paper.

Penelope A. Lewis. (2002). Finding the timer. University of Birmingham. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 6(5), 195-196.

Claudette Fortina (1), Julie Champagnea (1), and Marie Poirierb (2). (2007). Temporal order in memory and interval timing: An interference analysis. (1) Université Laval, (2) City University, London. Acta Psychologica 126, 18–33.

Dean V. Buonomano and Uma R. Karmarkar. (2002). How Do We Tell Time? University of California. Neuroscientist, 8(42), 42-51.

A. Ferrara, H. Lejeune and J.H. Wearden. (1997). Changing Sensitivity to Duration in Human Scalar Timing: An Experiment, a Review, and Some Possible Explanations. University of Lieage, University of Manchester. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 50B (3) , 217-237.

Richard B. Ivry and Thomas C. Richardson. (2002). Temporal Control and Coordination: The Multiple Timer Model. University of California, Berkeley. Brain and Cognition 48, 117 – 132.

Luke A. Jones and J. H. Wearden. (2003). More is not necessarily better: Examining the nature of the temporal reference memory component in timing. University of Manchester, The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 56B (4), 321–343.

Uma R. Karmarkar and Dean V. Buonomano. (2007). Timing in the Absence of Clocks: Encoding Time in Neural Network States. University of California, Berkley, University of California, Los Angeles. Neuron 53, 427–438.

Florian Klapproth and Martin Müllera (2008). Temporal generalization under time pressure in humans. University of Hildesheim, University of Tübingen. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 61(4), 588–600.

Ralf Th. Krampe, Ralf Engbert, and Reinhold Kliegl. (2002). Representational Models and Nonlinear Dynamics: Irreconcilable Approaches to Human Movement Timing and Coordination or Two Sides of the Same Coin? Introduction to the Special Issue on Movement Timing and Coordination. University of Potsdam,. Brain and Cognition 48, 1 – 6.

Matthew S. Matella andWarren H. Meckb . (2004). Cortico-striatal circuits and interval timing: coincidence detection of oscillatory processes.Villanova University, Duke University. Cognitive Brain Research 21, 139 – 170.

Luke A. Jones and J. H. Wearden. (2003). More is not necessarily better: Examining the nature of the temporal reference memory component in timing. University of Manchester UK. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 56B (4), 321–343.

Stacy A. Castner and Graham V. Williams. (2007). Tuning the engine of cognition: A focus on NMDA/D1 receptor interactions in prefrontal cortex. Yale University School of Medicine, VA Connecticut Healthcare System. Brain and Cognition 63, 94–122.

Ryota Miyauchi and Yoshi Taka Nakajma. (2006). Bilateral Assimilation of Two Neighboring Empty Time Intervals. Kyushu Institute of Design, Kyushu University. Music Perception, 22(3), 411–424.

Richard B. Ivry (1, 2) and John E. Schlerf (2). (2008). Dedicated and intrinsic models of time perception. (1) Department of Psychology, University of California, (2) Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California. Trends in Cognitive Sciences,12(7), 273-280.

Warran H. Meck and Chara Malapani. (2004). Neuroimaging of Interval Timing.

Catalin V. Buhusi and Warren H. Meck. (2005). What makes us tick? Functional and Neural Mechanisms of Interval Timing. Duke University. Nature Reviews: Neuroscience 6, 755-765.

Katie Overya and Robert Turnerb. (2009). The rhythmic brain. University of Edinburgh,
Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences. Coretx, 49, 1-3.

Aniruddhd Patel. (2006). Musical, Rhythm, Linguistic Rhythm, and Human Evolution. The Neurosciences Institute. Musical Rhythm and Evolution 99-103.

Penny Lewis. Academic Publications Research Bibliography.

Isabelle Peretz and Robert J. Zatorre. (2005). Brain Organization for Music Processing. University of Montreal, McGill University. Annual Revue of Psychology, 56, 89–114.

Ernst Pöppel. (2004). Lost in time: a historical frame, elementary processing units and the 3-second window. Munich University. Acta Neurobiol Experimentals, 64, 295-301.

Catherine E. Carr. (1993). Processing of Temporal Information on the Brain.University of Maryland. Annual Revue Neuroscience, 16, 223-43.

Thomas Rammsayer and Rolf Ulrich. (2001). Counting models of temporal discrimination. University of Göttingen, University of Tübingen. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 8(2), 270-277.

David Burr and Concetta Morrone. (2006). Time Perception: Space–Time in the Brain. Current Biology, 16(5), R171- R173.

Hans-Henning Schulze (1), Andreas Cordes (2), and Dirk Vorberg (3). (2005). Keeping Synchrony While Tempo Changes: Accelerando and Ritardando. (1) Philipps-Universität Marburg, (2) Institute for Mathematical Stochastics, Göttingen, (3) Technische Universität Braunschweig. Music Perception ,22(3), 461–477.

Elzbieta Szelag (1), Magdalena Kanabus (1), Iwona Kolodziejczyk (1), Joanna Kowalska (1) and Joanna Szuchnik (2). (2004). Individual differences in temporal information processing in humans. (1) Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology, Warsaw, Poland, (2) Institute of Physiology and Pathology of Hearing, Warsaw, Poland. Acta Neurobiol Exp, 64, 349-366.

Anna Christina Nobre and Jill O’Reilly. (2004). Time is of the essence. Oxford University. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 8(9), 387-389.

Stephen M. Rao (1), Andrew R. Mayer (1) and Deborah L. Harrington (1, 2 ,3). (2001). The evolution of brain activation during temporal processing. (1) Medical College of Wisconsin, (2) Department of Veterans Affairs, Albuquerque, New Mexico, (3) University of New Mexico. Nature Neuroscience, 4(3), 317-323.

Pamela Ulbrich (1), Jan Churan (1), Martina Fink (1), and Marc Wittmann (2). (2007). Temporal reproduction: Further evidence for two processes. (1) Ludwig-Maximilian University of Munich, (2) University of California. Acta Psychologica 125, 51–65.

Rolf Ulrich (1), Judith Nitschke (1), and Thomas Rammsayer (2). (2006). Crossmodal temporal discrimination: Assessing the predictions of a general pacemaker–counter model. (1) University of Tübingen, University of Göttingen. Perception & Psychophysics, 68 (7), 1140-1152.

Daniel Casasanto and Lera Boroditsky. (2006). Time in the mind: Using space to think about time. Stanford University. Cognition 106, 579–593.

John H. Wearden. (2003). Applying the scalar timing model to human time psychology: Progress and challenges. Keele University. Chapter 2, 1-19.

John H. Wearden (1), Roger Norton (2), Simon Martin (2), and Oliver Montford-Bebb (2). (2007). Internal Clock Processes and the Filled-Duration Illusion. (1) Keele University, (2) Manchester University. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance 33(3), 716 –729.

J. H. Wearden and Helga Lejeune. (2007). Scalar properties in humantiming: Conformity andviolations. Keele University, Universityof Liege. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1–19.

Alan M. Wing. (2002). Voluntary Timing and Brain Function: An Information Processing Approach. The University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham, UK. Brain and Cognition 48, 7 – 30.

 
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