Lesions in the cerebellum impact cross-modal temporal predictions
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The cerebellum (CE) supports the encoding of the precise sensory event timing and the generation of temporal predictions. Here we investigated whether focal CE lesions impact temporal predictions in a cross-modal context. Individuals with CE lesion (n=9) and healthy-matched controls (HC) were presented with visuo-auditory stimulus pairs, presented in a temporally regular (predictable) or irregular (unpredictable) manner while EEG was recorded. We hypothesized cross-modal temporal predictions to be mediated by pre-stimulus cerebello-cortical beta-band (12-25Hz) activity. In turn, we expected HC, but not CE patients, to show a modulation of pre-stimulus beta power as a function of temporal prediction. HC showed greater pre-stimulus beta-band suppression in anticipation of sound onsets, and stronger post-stimulus delta- and theta-band (1-4Hz; 4-8Hz) power in the predictable than the unpredictable condition. Furthermore, they displayed a significant modulation of pre-stimulus delta-beta cross-frequency coupling as a function of temporal prediction. These effects were not observed in the CE group. Results confirm that cerebellar lesions impair the generation of temporal predictions in cross-modal (visuo-auditory) stimulus processing, extending the role of cerebellar predictive timing from sensorimotor to motor-independent cross-modal perception.