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Time perception

About: Time perception is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1918 publications have been published within this topic receiving 87020 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that schizophrenia patients may not be able to accurately maintain the internal representation of a target over time and space, which may have deleterious consequences in goal-directed behavior.

26 citations

01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: This article found that subjective lengthening of the perceived duration was associated with increased activation in both the right supplementary motor area (SMA) and right pre-SMA and basal ganglia (including the putamen and right pallidum).
Abstract: The current research was designed to establish whether individual differences in timing performance predict neural activation in the areas that subserve the perception of short durations ranging between 400 and 1600 milliseconds. Seventeen participants completed both a temporal bisection task and a control task, in a mixed fMRI design. In keeping with previous research, there was increased activation in a network of regions typically active during time perception including the right supplementary motor area (SMA) and right pre-SMA and basal ganglia (including the putamen and right pallidum). Furthermore, correlations between neural activity in the right inferior frontal gyrus and SMA and timing performance corroborate the results of a recent meta-analysis and are further evidence that the SMA forms part of a neural clock that is responsible for the accumulation of temporal information. Specifically, subjective lengthening of the perceived duration were associated with increased activation in both the right SMA (and right pre-SMA) and right inferior frontal gyrus.

26 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that the contribution of these strongly interconnected structures in the processing of temporal information is not fixed; their contribution depends not only on the duration of the time interval to be assessed by the brain but also on the cognitive set involved in the chosen task and on the stimulus modality used for marking time.

26 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that background music may not always reduce estimates of duration by drawing attention away from the passage of time, and may actually expand the subjective length of an interval by creating accessible traces in memory, which are retrospectively used to infer duration.
Abstract: The segmentation-change model of time perception proposes that individuals engaged in cognitive tasks during a given interval of time retrospectively estimate duration by recalling events that occurred during the interval and inferring each event's duration. Previous research suggests that individuals can recall the number of songs heard during an interval and infer the length of each song, exactly the conditions that foster estimates of duration based on the segmentation-change model. The results of a laboratory experiment indicated that subjects who solved word-search puzzles for 20 min. estimated the duration of the interval to be longer when 8 short songs (<3 min.) as opposed to 4 long songs (6+ min.) were played in the background, regardless of whether the musical format was Contemporary Dance or New Age. Assuming each song represented a distinct segment in memory, these results are consistent with the segmentation-change model. These results suggest that background music may not always reduce estimates of duration by drawing attention away from the passage of time. Instead, background music may actually expand the subjective length of an interval by creating accessible traces in memory, which are retrospectively used to infer duration.

26 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202395
2022178
202177
202083
2019101
201896