Internal clock processes and the filled-duration illusion. |
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Authors: | Wearden, John H. Norton, Roger Martin, Simon Montford-Bebb, Oliver |
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Abstract: | In 3 experiments, the authors compared duration judgments of filled stimuli (tones) with unfilled ones (intervals defined by clicks or gaps in tones). Temporal generalization procedures (Experiment 1) and verbal estimation procedures (Experiments 2 and 3) all showed that subjective durations of the tones were considerably longer than those of unfilled intervals defined either by clicks or gaps, with the unfilled intervals being judged as approximately 55%-65% of the duration of the filled ones when real duration was the same. Analyses derived from the pacemaker-switch-accumulator clock model incorporated into scalar timing theory suggested that the filled/unfilled difference in mean estimates was due to higher pacemaker speed in the former case, although conclusively ruling out alternative interpretations in terms of attention remains difficult. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | time perception temporal generalization verbal estimation filled duration illusion click trains internal clock processes |
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