“…Subjects with Parkinson’s disease, for example, show deficits in the estimation and production of interval timing within the range of seconds ( Pastor et al, 1992 ) and exhibit a significant decrease in the magnitude of CNV ( Ikeda et al, 1997 ). In experimental animals, local application of dopamine receptor antagonists into the striatum alters self-timing in monkeys ( Kunimatsu and Tanaka, 2016 ), and more specifically, optogenetic inhibition of nigro-striatal pathways disrupts temporal discrimination in rodents ( Soares et al, 2016 ). However, the firing of midbrain dopamine neurons is known to be generally phasic ( Bromberg-Martin et al, 2010 ) and therefore appears unlikely to continuously keep track of elapsed time during motor preparation, while the gain of transient sensory response might carry temporal information ( Soares et al, 2016 ).…”