Human time perception is malleable and subject to many biases. For example, it has repeatedly been shown that stimuli that are physically intense or that are unexpected seem to last longer. Two competing hypotheses have been proposed to account for such biases: One states that these temporal illusions are the result of increased levels of arousal that speeds up neural clock dynamics, whereas the alternative "magnitude coding" account states that the magnitude of sensory responses causally modulates perceived durations. Common experimental paradigms used to study temporal biases cannot dissociate between these accounts, as arousal and sensory magnitude covary and modulate each other. Here, we present two temporal discrimination experiments w...
The brain constantly adjusts perceived duration based on the recent event history. One such lab phen...
AbstractThe passage of time is inseparably linked to any subjective experience, but time cannot be p...
Events can sometimes appear longer or shorter in duration than other events of equal length. For exa...
Human time perception is malleable and subject to many biases. For example, it has repeatedly been s...
Human time perception is malleable and subject to many biases. For example, it has repeatedly been s...
Time perception is malleable, and the perceived duration of stimuli can be strongly affected by the ...
Our subjective perception of time is optimized to temporal regularities in the environment. This is ...
It has been suggested that repeated stimuli have shorter subjective duration than novel items, perha...
Prior experience with a stimulus profoundly affects how it is processed, perceived, and acted upon. ...
Distortions of perceived duration can give crucial insights into the mechanisms that underlie the pr...
How do humans perceive the passage of time and the duration of events without a dedicated sensory sy...
Subjective duration is strongly influenced by repetition and novelty, such that an oddball stimulus ...
Subjective duration is strongly influenced by repetition and novelty, such that an oddball stimulus ...
AbstractDistortions of perceived duration can give crucial insights into the mechanisms that underli...
AbstractTemporal perception encompasses several timing properties, including duration and temporal r...
The brain constantly adjusts perceived duration based on the recent event history. One such lab phen...
AbstractThe passage of time is inseparably linked to any subjective experience, but time cannot be p...
Events can sometimes appear longer or shorter in duration than other events of equal length. For exa...
Human time perception is malleable and subject to many biases. For example, it has repeatedly been s...
Human time perception is malleable and subject to many biases. For example, it has repeatedly been s...
Time perception is malleable, and the perceived duration of stimuli can be strongly affected by the ...
Our subjective perception of time is optimized to temporal regularities in the environment. This is ...
It has been suggested that repeated stimuli have shorter subjective duration than novel items, perha...
Prior experience with a stimulus profoundly affects how it is processed, perceived, and acted upon. ...
Distortions of perceived duration can give crucial insights into the mechanisms that underlie the pr...
How do humans perceive the passage of time and the duration of events without a dedicated sensory sy...
Subjective duration is strongly influenced by repetition and novelty, such that an oddball stimulus ...
Subjective duration is strongly influenced by repetition and novelty, such that an oddball stimulus ...
AbstractDistortions of perceived duration can give crucial insights into the mechanisms that underli...
AbstractTemporal perception encompasses several timing properties, including duration and temporal r...
The brain constantly adjusts perceived duration based on the recent event history. One such lab phen...
AbstractThe passage of time is inseparably linked to any subjective experience, but time cannot be p...
Events can sometimes appear longer or shorter in duration than other events of equal length. For exa...