The neural basis of time perception remains unknown. A prominent account is the pacemaker-accumulator model, wherein regular ticks of some physiological or neural pacemaker are read out as time. Putative candidates for the pacemaker have been suggested in physiological processes (heartbeat), or dopaminergic mid-brain neurons, whose activity has been associated with spontaneous blinking. However, such proposals have difficulty accounting for observations that time perception varies systematically with perceptual content. We examined physiological influences on human duration estimates for naturalistic videos between 1-64 seconds using cardiac and eye recordings. Duration estimates were biased by the amount of change in scene content. Contrar...
Human experience of time exhibits systematic, context-dependent deviations from clock time; for exam...
IntroductionTime perception in humans can be relative (beat-based) or absolute (duration-based). Alt...
Sensory adaptation experiments have revealed the existence of ‘rate after-effects’ - adapting to a r...
Despite being a fundamental dimension of experience, how the human brain generates the perception of...
Clock-counter models, the most influential cognitive models of temporal computation, have been succe...
Human time perception is malleable and subject to many biases. For example, it has repeatedly been s...
Theories of human temporal perception suggest that changes in physiological arousal distort the perc...
We report a distortion of subjective time perception in which the duration of a first interval is pe...
Human experience of time exhibits systematic, context-dependent deviations from clock time; for exam...
How does the brain estimate time? This old question has led to many biological and psychological mod...
Accurately encoding the duration and temporal order of events is essential for survival and importan...
AbstractTemporal perception encompasses several timing properties, including duration and temporal r...
Accumulating evidence from pharmacology, neuroimaging, and genetics indicates that striatal dopamine...
Accurately encoding the duration and temporal order of events is essential for survival and importan...
Human time perception is malleable and subject to many biases. For example, it has repeatedly been s...
Human experience of time exhibits systematic, context-dependent deviations from clock time; for exam...
IntroductionTime perception in humans can be relative (beat-based) or absolute (duration-based). Alt...
Sensory adaptation experiments have revealed the existence of ‘rate after-effects’ - adapting to a r...
Despite being a fundamental dimension of experience, how the human brain generates the perception of...
Clock-counter models, the most influential cognitive models of temporal computation, have been succe...
Human time perception is malleable and subject to many biases. For example, it has repeatedly been s...
Theories of human temporal perception suggest that changes in physiological arousal distort the perc...
We report a distortion of subjective time perception in which the duration of a first interval is pe...
Human experience of time exhibits systematic, context-dependent deviations from clock time; for exam...
How does the brain estimate time? This old question has led to many biological and psychological mod...
Accurately encoding the duration and temporal order of events is essential for survival and importan...
AbstractTemporal perception encompasses several timing properties, including duration and temporal r...
Accumulating evidence from pharmacology, neuroimaging, and genetics indicates that striatal dopamine...
Accurately encoding the duration and temporal order of events is essential for survival and importan...
Human time perception is malleable and subject to many biases. For example, it has repeatedly been s...
Human experience of time exhibits systematic, context-dependent deviations from clock time; for exam...
IntroductionTime perception in humans can be relative (beat-based) or absolute (duration-based). Alt...
Sensory adaptation experiments have revealed the existence of ‘rate after-effects’ - adapting to a r...