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TUTORIAL REVIEW Timing and time perception: A review of recent behavioral and neuroscience findings and theoretical directions
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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 Reviewread more
Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
Neural basis of the perception and estimation of time
TL;DR: It is proposed that the interconnections built into this core timing mechanism are designed to provide a form of degeneracy as protection against injury, disease, or age-related decline.
Journal ArticleDOI
Pathophysiological distortions in time perception and timed performance
Melissa J. Allman,Warren H. Meck +1 more
TL;DR: These findings are used to evaluate the Striatal Beat Frequency Theory, which is a neurobiological model of interval timing based upon the coincidence detection of oscillatory processes in corticostriatal circuits that can be mapped onto the stages of information processing proposed by Scalar Timing Theory.
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Problematic smartphone use and relations with negative affect, fear of missing out, and fear of negative and positive evaluation.
TL;DR: Results demonstrated that FoMO was most strongly related to both problematic smartphone use and social smartphone use relative to negative affect and fears of negative and positive evaluation, and these relations held when controlling for age and gender.
Journal ArticleDOI
Properties of the Internal Clock: First- and Second-Order Principles of Subjective Time
TL;DR: This review summarizes recent behavioral and neurobiological findings and provides a theoretical framework for considering how changes in the properties of the internal clock impact time perception and other psychological domains.
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When time is space: evidence for a mental time line.
TL;DR: The empirical findings supporting the possibility that humans represent the subjective time flow on a spatially oriented "mental time line" that is accessed through spatial attention mechanisms are presented.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI
Processing resources in timing and sequencing tasks.
TL;DR: The results suggest that time perception and sequence perception are related cognitive processes that rely on a common set of attentional resources.
Journal ArticleDOI
Contraction of time in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder.
TL;DR: The authors found that people with ADHD do in fact have a rhythm cut-off that is faster in tempo than those without ADHD, consistent with the idea that impaired dopamine dynamics have systemic consequences for cognitive function.
Journal ArticleDOI
Time perception with and without a concurrent nontemporal task
Nancy S. Hemmes,Nancy S. Hemmes,Bruce L. Brown,Bruce L. Brown,Chris N. Kladopoulos,Chris N. Kladopoulos +5 more
TL;DR: The data support the perceptual hypothesis that different sources of sensory input mediate timing under task and no-task conditions and show a decrease in perceived duration under concurrent task conditions, in accord with attentional resource allocation models of timing.
Journal ArticleDOI
Rules for a complex quantum world.
TL;DR: Quantum information science reveals that entanglement is a quantifiable physical resource, like energy that enables information processing tasks, and is a fundamental field that explains the general principles like the laws ofEntanglement.
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