Binding effect refers to the perceptual attraction between an action and an outcome leading to a subjective compression of time. Most studies investigating binding effects exclusively employ the "pressing" action without exploring other types of actions. The present study addresses this issue by introducing another action, releasing action or the voluntary lifting of the finger/wrist, to investigate the differences between voluntary pressing and releasing actions. Results reveal that releasing actions led to robust yet short-lived temporal binding effects, whereas pressing condition had steady temporal binding effects up to super-seconds. The two actions also differ in sensitivity to changes in temporal contiguity and contingency, which cou...
Forming a coherent percept of an event requires different sensory inputs originating from the event ...
How does the brain distinguish actions that we perform from movements imposed on us? To study links ...
The malleability of our subjective perception of time has recently received a great amount of empiri...
Binding effect refers to the perceptual attraction between an action and an outcome leading to a sub...
Binding effect refers to the perceptual attraction between an action and an outcome leading to a sub...
The intentional binding effect refers to a subjective compression over a temporal interval between t...
International audienceTemporal binding is understood as an effect in which a temporal interval betwe...
Previous studies have documented a subjective temporal attraction between actions and their effects....
Previous studies have documented temporal attraction in perceived times of actions and their effects...
People form coherent representations of goal-directed actions. Such agency experiences of intentiona...
Prior research has shown that our perception of time is compressed when we volitionally perform acti...
International audienceHuman actions are often classiWed as either internally generated, or externall...
Abstract Temporal binding refers to a systemic bias in the perceived time interval between two relat...
Recently, it has been shown that the perceived times of voluntary movements and their effects are pe...
Temporal binding refers to the compression of the perceived time interval between voluntary actions ...
Forming a coherent percept of an event requires different sensory inputs originating from the event ...
How does the brain distinguish actions that we perform from movements imposed on us? To study links ...
The malleability of our subjective perception of time has recently received a great amount of empiri...
Binding effect refers to the perceptual attraction between an action and an outcome leading to a sub...
Binding effect refers to the perceptual attraction between an action and an outcome leading to a sub...
The intentional binding effect refers to a subjective compression over a temporal interval between t...
International audienceTemporal binding is understood as an effect in which a temporal interval betwe...
Previous studies have documented a subjective temporal attraction between actions and their effects....
Previous studies have documented temporal attraction in perceived times of actions and their effects...
People form coherent representations of goal-directed actions. Such agency experiences of intentiona...
Prior research has shown that our perception of time is compressed when we volitionally perform acti...
International audienceHuman actions are often classiWed as either internally generated, or externall...
Abstract Temporal binding refers to a systemic bias in the perceived time interval between two relat...
Recently, it has been shown that the perceived times of voluntary movements and their effects are pe...
Temporal binding refers to the compression of the perceived time interval between voluntary actions ...
Forming a coherent percept of an event requires different sensory inputs originating from the event ...
How does the brain distinguish actions that we perform from movements imposed on us? To study links ...
The malleability of our subjective perception of time has recently received a great amount of empiri...