Abstract
AbstractTime is a uniquely human yet culturally ubiquitous concept acquired over childhood and provides an underlying dimension for episodic memory and estimating durations. Because time, unlike distance, lacks a sensory representation, we hypothesized that subjects at different ages attribute different meanings to it when comparing durations; pre-kindergarten children compare the density of events, while adults use the concept of observer-independent absolute time. We asked groups of pre-kindergarteners, school-age children, and adults to compare the durations of an "eventful" and "uneventful" video, both 1-minute long but durations unknown to subjects. In addition, participants were asked to express the durations of both videos non-verbally with simple hand gestures. Statistical analysis has revealed highly polarized temporal biases in each group, where pre-kindergarteners estimated the duration of the eventful video as "longer." In contrast, the school-age group of children and adults claimed the same about the uneventful video. The tendency to represent temporal durations with a horizontal hand gesture was evident among all three groups, with an increasing prevalence with age. These results support the hypothesis that pre-kindergarten-age children use heuristics to estimate time, and they convert from availability to sampling heuristics between pre-kindergarten and school age.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference95 articles.
1. Rovelli, C., Segre, E. & Carnell, S. The Order of Time. Large print edition. (Center Point Large Print, 2018).
2. Curran, W., Benton, C. P., Harris, J. M., Hibbard, P. B. & Beattie, L. Adapting to time: Duration channels do not mediate human time perception. J. Vis. 16(5), 4. https://doi.org/10.1167/16.5.4 (2016).
3. Howard, L. R. et al. The hippocampus and entorhinal cortex encode the path and Euclidean distances to goals during navigation. Curr. Biol. 24(12), 1331–1340 (2014).
4. Bhattacharyya, R., Musallam, S. & Andersen, R. A. Parietal reach region encodes reach depth using retinal disparity and vergence angle signals. J. Neurophysiol. 102(2), 805–816. https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.90359.2008 (2009).
5. Wearden, J. H. & McShane, B. Interval production as an analogue of the peak procedure: Evidence for similarity of human and animal timing processes. Q. J. Exp. Psychol. B Compar. Physiol. Psychol. 40(4), 363–375 (1988).
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献