Topic
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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TL;DR: It is proposed that a temporal component was extracted from speed, which approximated momentary time, which demarcated minimal intervals of spatial change (defined by neuronal processing time) and provided an argument to integrate concepts of space-referenced time processing and a clock-like processing model.
60 citations
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TL;DR: The results show that the effect is empirically robust, does not rely on repeated presentation of fixed intervals, truly affects time perception, and persists across intervals much longer than in earlier demonstrations with the Libet Clock paradigm.
Abstract: We report two experiments demonstrating temporal binding between action and outcome (Haggard et al. 2002a) as measured in a temporal reproduction paradigm. Our results show that the effect is empirically robust, does not rely on repeated presentation of fixed intervals, truly affects time perception, and persists across intervals much longer than in earlier demonstrations with the Libet Clock paradigm (Libet et al. 1983).
60 citations
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TL;DR: The hypothesis that aging is associated with declines in automatic processing of time-dependent stimulus features, and this is related to cognitive function, is supported by measurement of the auditory mismatch negativity in younger and older adults.
60 citations
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TL;DR: Comparisons of prospective and retrospective time estimation in younger adults, older adults, and AD patients shed light on the relationship between time perception and the ability to mentally project oneself into time, two skills contributing to human memory functioning.
60 citations
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TL;DR: There is difficulty in studying quantitatively the estimation of time, and there is a relatively small amount of experimental work in the subject on psychiatric patients.
Abstract: Introduction Variations in the estimation and judgment of time passage, in the reproduction of intervals, and in the subjective attitude to the flow of time occur in many psychopathological states and in the healthy person from time to time. Schilder 8 has reviewed the psychopathology of time and noted that the schizophrenic patient may have a disturbance in the subjective feeling of time but not in the perception of time. Aubrey Lewis 5 noted that alteration of the consciousness of time is a primary alteration and predicted that such alteration would be found as often as it is looked for. In general, there is difficulty in studying quantitatively the estimation of time, and there is a relatively small amount of experimental work in the subject on psychiatric patients. Pieron, 7 Francis, 1 and Hoagland 2 developed the notion that the mechanism of time perception in the human organism depends on the
60 citations