The field of psychology of time has typically distinguished between prospective timing and retrospective duration estimation: in prospective timing, participants attend to and encode time, whereas in retrospective estimation, estimates are based on the memory of what happened. Prior research on prospective timing has primarily focused on attentional mechanisms to explain timing behavior, but it remains unclear the extent to which memory processes may also play a role. The present studies investigate this issue, and specifically, the role of newly learned encoded event structure. Two structural properties of dynamic event sequences were examined, which are known to modulate retrospective duration estimates: the perceived number of segments a...
How do people represent the duration of an event in memory and which mechanisms except timing are in...
In the visual oddball paradigm, surprising inputs can seem expanded in time relative to unsurprising...
Prior experience with a stimulus profoundly affects how it is processed, perceived, and acted upon. ...
Repeated events can seem shortened. It has been suggested that this results from an inverse relation...
In six experiments, this dissertation investigated duration judgments for verbal stimuli, testing pr...
Five experiments examined whether changes in the pace of external events influence people’s judgment...
Five experiments investigated the cognitive processes involved in the elaboration of past and future...
In order to function optimally within our environment, we continuously extract temporal patterns fro...
Human perception and experience of time are strongly influenced by ongoing stimulation, memory of pa...
Remembering to perform an action when a specific event occurs is referred to as Event-Based Prospect...
peer reviewedA study containing four experiments provided evidence in favour of assimilation effects...
AbstractHow do people represent the duration of an event in memory and which mechanisms except timin...
Episodic memory was initially defined as our ability to relive event-specific details and to remembe...
peer reviewedWhy does it take less time to remember an event than to experience it? Recent evidence ...
peer reviewedMentally replaying past events (e.g., having breakfast, doing the laundry) generally ta...
How do people represent the duration of an event in memory and which mechanisms except timing are in...
In the visual oddball paradigm, surprising inputs can seem expanded in time relative to unsurprising...
Prior experience with a stimulus profoundly affects how it is processed, perceived, and acted upon. ...
Repeated events can seem shortened. It has been suggested that this results from an inverse relation...
In six experiments, this dissertation investigated duration judgments for verbal stimuli, testing pr...
Five experiments examined whether changes in the pace of external events influence people’s judgment...
Five experiments investigated the cognitive processes involved in the elaboration of past and future...
In order to function optimally within our environment, we continuously extract temporal patterns fro...
Human perception and experience of time are strongly influenced by ongoing stimulation, memory of pa...
Remembering to perform an action when a specific event occurs is referred to as Event-Based Prospect...
peer reviewedA study containing four experiments provided evidence in favour of assimilation effects...
AbstractHow do people represent the duration of an event in memory and which mechanisms except timin...
Episodic memory was initially defined as our ability to relive event-specific details and to remembe...
peer reviewedWhy does it take less time to remember an event than to experience it? Recent evidence ...
peer reviewedMentally replaying past events (e.g., having breakfast, doing the laundry) generally ta...
How do people represent the duration of an event in memory and which mechanisms except timing are in...
In the visual oddball paradigm, surprising inputs can seem expanded in time relative to unsurprising...
Prior experience with a stimulus profoundly affects how it is processed, perceived, and acted upon. ...