Encoding, working memory, or decision: how feedback modulates time perception

Author:

Li Langyu12ORCID,Hou Chunna12ORCID,Peng Chunhua3,Chen Youguo12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Cognition and Personality (Ministry of Education) , Faculty of Psychology, , Chongqing 400715 , China

2. Time Psychology Research Center, Center of Studies for Psychology and Social Development, Southwest University , Faculty of Psychology, , Chongqing 400715 , China

3. Chongqing Key Laboratory of Emotion and Mental Health, Chongqing University of Arts and Sciences , Chongqing 402160 , China

Abstract

AbstractThe hypothesis that individuals can accurately represent temporal information within approximately 3 s is the premise of several theoretical models and empirical studies in the field of temporal processing. The significance of accurately representing time within 3 s and the universality of the overestimation contrast dramatically. To clarify whether this overestimation arises from an inability to accurately represent time or a response bias, we systematically examined whether feedback reduces overestimation at the 3 temporal processing stages of timing (encoding), working memory, and decisions proposed by the scalar timing model. Participants reproduced the time interval between 2 circles with or without feedback, while the electroencephalogram (EEG) was synchronously recorded. Behavioral results showed that feedback shortened reproduced times and significantly minimized overestimation. EEG results showed that feedback significantly decreased the amplitude of contingent negative variation (CNV) in the decision stage but did not modulate the CNV amplitude in the encoding stage or the P2–P3b amplitudes in the working memory stage. These results suggest that overestimation arises from response bias when individuals convert an accurate representation of time into behavior. Our study provides electrophysiological evidence to support the conception that short intervals under approximately 3 s can be accurately represented as “temporal gestalt.”

Funder

General Program of the Natural Science Foundation of Chongqing

Humanities and Social Science Youth Foundation of Ministry of Education of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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