The interference of magnitudes in different dimensions has been demonstrated previously, but the effect of training in one dimension on judgment of another has yet to be examined. The present study aimed to investigate the effect of training in numerosity judgment on judgment of duration. 32 participants took part in two sessions, 12 days apart, and had to judge which of two successive sets of items was presented longer. Half of the participants (training group) were additionally trained in 11 sessions to judge which one of the two successive sets of items was more numerous. It was found that the participants in the training group became more prone to the interference of numerosity on judging duration after training, when compared to the co...
<div><p>Previous studies that examined human judgments of frequency and duration found an asymmetric...
Perceptual interferences in the estimation of quantities (time, space and numbers) have been interpr...
Several studies have reported that numerical magnitudes biases temporal judgments, i.e., large numer...
The interference of magnitudes in different dimensions has been demonstrated previously, but the eff...
The interference of magnitudes in different dimensions has been demonstrated previously, but the eff...
The interference of magnitudes in different dimensions has been demonstrated previously, but the eff...
<p>(a) based on the commonalities of numerosity and duration judgement, (b) through higher levels of...
There is strong evidence that magnitudes in different dimensions can interfere. A majority of previo...
There is strong evidence that magnitudes in different dimensions can interfere. A majority of previo...
Processing quantities such as the number of objects in a set, size, spatial arrangement and time is ...
Our ability to process numerical and temporal information is an evolutionary skill thought to origin...
Magnitudes or quantities of the different dimensions that define a stimulus (e.g., space, speed or n...
Previous studies showed that the magnitude information conveyed by sensory cues, such as length or s...
Magnitudes or quantities of the different dimensions that define a stimulus (e.g., space, speed or n...
The existence of a possible common mechanism for duration and numerosity processing was tested with ...
<div><p>Previous studies that examined human judgments of frequency and duration found an asymmetric...
Perceptual interferences in the estimation of quantities (time, space and numbers) have been interpr...
Several studies have reported that numerical magnitudes biases temporal judgments, i.e., large numer...
The interference of magnitudes in different dimensions has been demonstrated previously, but the eff...
The interference of magnitudes in different dimensions has been demonstrated previously, but the eff...
The interference of magnitudes in different dimensions has been demonstrated previously, but the eff...
<p>(a) based on the commonalities of numerosity and duration judgement, (b) through higher levels of...
There is strong evidence that magnitudes in different dimensions can interfere. A majority of previo...
There is strong evidence that magnitudes in different dimensions can interfere. A majority of previo...
Processing quantities such as the number of objects in a set, size, spatial arrangement and time is ...
Our ability to process numerical and temporal information is an evolutionary skill thought to origin...
Magnitudes or quantities of the different dimensions that define a stimulus (e.g., space, speed or n...
Previous studies showed that the magnitude information conveyed by sensory cues, such as length or s...
Magnitudes or quantities of the different dimensions that define a stimulus (e.g., space, speed or n...
The existence of a possible common mechanism for duration and numerosity processing was tested with ...
<div><p>Previous studies that examined human judgments of frequency and duration found an asymmetric...
Perceptual interferences in the estimation of quantities (time, space and numbers) have been interpr...
Several studies have reported that numerical magnitudes biases temporal judgments, i.e., large numer...