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Research Article

Experience with Event Timing Does not Alter Emergent Timing: Further Evidence for Robustness of Event and Emergent Timing

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Pages 113-120 | Received 13 Oct 2017, Accepted 05 Jan 2018, Published online: 15 Feb 2018
 

ABSTRACT

Although, event and emergent timings are thought of as mutually exclusive, significant correlations between tapping and circle drawing (Baer, Thibodeau, Gralnick, Li, & Penhune, Citation2013; Studenka, Zelaznik, & Balasubramaniam, Citation2012; Zelaznik & Rosenbaum, Citation2010) suggest that emergent timing may not be as robust as once thought. We aimed to test this hypothesis in both a younger (18–25) and older (55–100) population. Participants performed one block of circle drawing as a baseline, then six blocks of tapping, followed by circle drawing. We examined the use of event timing. Our hypothesis that acute experience with event timing would bias an individual to use event timing during an emergent task was not supported. We, instead, support the robustness of event and emergent timing as independent timing modes.

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