The effects of aging and brain damage on time perception are not well understood. In this study, we test the hypothesis that aging affects timing variability and that parietal damage affects timing magnitude. Young and healthy college-age students, older subjects, and a patient with bilateral parietal damage were assessed on their ability to estimate and produce time intervals ranging from four to fifteen seconds. Subjects completed two tasks: production of the duration of a stimulus in seconds and estimation of when the number of seconds presented as a stimulus had elapsed. Data was analyzed via power functions: ψ = Kφβ. Aging and brain damage should theoretically result in either reduced exponents or increased variability in performance. ...
Interval timing performance in cognitive decline is typically characterized by decreased accuracy, p...
Unlike prospective time perception paradigms, in which participants are aware that they have to esti...
Previous research has shown that orienting attention in time can help to improve behavioural outcome...
The effects of aging and brain damage on time perception are not well understood. In this study, we ...
Brain ubiquitously receives temporal information. As people get older, their timing performances cha...
This study examined the difference in the perception of time between young and older adults in a tem...
Background: Researchers have devoted much effort in trying to understand how and why our subjective ...
Distortions of time perception are presented by a number of neuropsychiatric illnesses. Here we surv...
AbstractTime perception is a important subject in cognitive psychology, which is essential for our u...
International audienceAge-related differences in time estimation were examined by comparing the temp...
Our ability to experience the passage of time is fundamental to our lives. Consequently, disruptions...
Performance on timing tasks changes with age. Whether these changes reflect a real “clock” problem d...
Distortions of time perception are presented by a number of neuropsychiatric illnesses. Here we surv...
AbstractTime perception is modified in normal aging and Alzheimer's Disease (AD), yet the nature and...
In this study, we investigated time perception in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI). Fiftee...
Interval timing performance in cognitive decline is typically characterized by decreased accuracy, p...
Unlike prospective time perception paradigms, in which participants are aware that they have to esti...
Previous research has shown that orienting attention in time can help to improve behavioural outcome...
The effects of aging and brain damage on time perception are not well understood. In this study, we ...
Brain ubiquitously receives temporal information. As people get older, their timing performances cha...
This study examined the difference in the perception of time between young and older adults in a tem...
Background: Researchers have devoted much effort in trying to understand how and why our subjective ...
Distortions of time perception are presented by a number of neuropsychiatric illnesses. Here we surv...
AbstractTime perception is a important subject in cognitive psychology, which is essential for our u...
International audienceAge-related differences in time estimation were examined by comparing the temp...
Our ability to experience the passage of time is fundamental to our lives. Consequently, disruptions...
Performance on timing tasks changes with age. Whether these changes reflect a real “clock” problem d...
Distortions of time perception are presented by a number of neuropsychiatric illnesses. Here we surv...
AbstractTime perception is modified in normal aging and Alzheimer's Disease (AD), yet the nature and...
In this study, we investigated time perception in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI). Fiftee...
Interval timing performance in cognitive decline is typically characterized by decreased accuracy, p...
Unlike prospective time perception paradigms, in which participants are aware that they have to esti...
Previous research has shown that orienting attention in time can help to improve behavioural outcome...