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TUTORIAL REVIEW Timing and time perception: A review of recent behavioral and neuroscience findings and theoretical directions

Simon Grondin
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TLDR
A review of recent literature related to psychological time and time perception can be found in this article, where the roles of the cerebellum, of the cerebral cortices, and of the basal ganglia in the timing processes are emphasized.
Abstract
Suppose someone had to prepare a review article on visual perception, instead of time perception. This individual would probably ask for a series of reviews, with at least one—and probably several—dedicated to color, distance, shape, and motion perception, and maybe to other aspects of visual perception. It would be very difficult to complete the same exercise for time perception since the categories of temporal experiences are not as clearly defined. However, for a reader to understand the scope of a text on time perception, it is essential to develop a representation of what the main research avenues or categories are. The present text should help the reader to grasp the scope of recent literature related to psychological time and time perception. After a brief overview of the various perspectives on what could be meant by psychological time, the review will propose to identify of series of key concepts and empirical findings that should delineate the field of time perception and timing, and will discuss some models of time perception. The article also provides a review of the main recent findings in the field in which a neuroscientific approach to timing is adopted. In this section, the roles of the cerebellum, of the cerebral cortices, and of the basal ganglia in the timing processes are emphasized. Time Perception Beyond the Focus of the Present Review

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Experiences of activity and causality in schizophrenia: when predictive deficits lead to a retrospective over-binding.

TL;DR: It is argued that experiences of activity result from patients being prone to aberrantly infer causal relations between unrelated events in a retrospective way owing to widespread predictive deficits.
Journal ArticleDOI

Obsessive–Compulsive Disorder and Memory-Mixing in Temporal Comparison: Is Implicit Learning the Missing Link?

TL;DR: It is hypothesized that patients with OCD, who are known to have deficits in implicit learning, will display a lesser degree of “memory-mixing” on a temporal reproduction/comparison task in comparison to healthy participants.
Book ChapterDOI

Getting the timing right: experimental protocols for investigating time with functional neuroimaging and psychopharmacology.

TL;DR: This chapter provides an overview of some of the key findings in the functional imaging literature of both duration estimation and temporal prediction, and outlines techniques that can be used to allow timing-related activations to be interpreted more unambiguously.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Neuroeconomic Theory of Mental Time Travel.

TL;DR: The theory demonstrates that the memory-based process is useful when the environment features novel experiences that are likely to be relevant in future decision-making, hence worth remembering accurately, and optimal in environments that either do not change significantly, or have a small chance of being repeated in the future.
Journal ArticleDOI

How language and event recall can shape memory for time.

TL;DR: Results suggest that the density of the details recalled and language-mediated recollection shape memory for event duration, and argue that temporal memory distortions stem from event encoding and retrieval mechanisms.
References
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Book

The Principles of Psychology

William James
TL;DR: For instance, the authors discusses the multiplicity of the consciousness of self in the form of the stream of thought and the perception of space in the human brain, which is the basis for our work.
Book

Detection Theory: A User's Guide

TL;DR: This book discusses Detection and Discrimination of Compound Stimuli: Tools for Multidimensional Detection Theory and Multi-Interval Discrimination Designs and Adaptive Methods for Estimating Empirical Thresholds.
Book ChapterDOI

Putting Time in perspective : A valid, reliable individual-differences metric

TL;DR: The Zimbardo Time Perspective Inventory (ZPI) as mentioned in this paper is a measure assessing personal variations in time perspective profiles and specific time perspective biases, and it has been shown to have convergent, divergent, discriminant and predictive validity.
Book

Adaptation-level theory

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