Serial dependence in timing at the perceptual level being modulated by working memory

Author:

Chen Shuai1ORCID,Wang Tianhe23,Bao Yan145ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychological and Cognitive Sciences Peking University Beijing China

2. Department of Psychology University of California Berkeley Berkeley California USA

3. Helen Wills Institute, University of California Berkeley California USA

4. Institute of Medical Psychology Ludwig Maximilian University Munich Germany

5. Beijing Key Laboratory of Behavior and Mental Health Peking University Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractRecent experiences bias the perception of following stimuli, as has been verified in various kinds of experiments in visual perception. This phenomenon, known as serial dependence, may reflect mechanisms to maintain perceptual stability. In the current study, we examined several key properties of serial dependence in temporal perception. Firstly, we examined the source of the serial dependence effect in temporal perception. We found that perception without motor reproduction is sufficient to induce the sequential effect; motor reproduction caused a stronger effect and is achieved by biasing the perception of the future target duration rather than directly influencing the subsequent movement. Secondly, we ask how working memory influences serial dependence in a temporal reproduction task. By varying the delay time between standard duration and the reproduction, we showed that the strength of serial dependence is enhanced as the delay increased. Those features of serial dependence are consistent with what has been observed in visual perceptual tasks, for example, orientation perception or location perception. The similarities between the visual and the timing tasks may suggest a similar neural coding mechanism of magnitude between the visual stimuli and the duration.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Psychology

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