Time perception, attention, and memory: A selective review

This article provides a selective review of time perception research, mainly focusing on the authors' research. Aspects of psychological time include simultaneity, successiveness, temporal order, and duration judgments. In contrast to findings at interstimulus intervals or durations less than 3...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta psychologica 2014-06, Vol.149, p.129-133
Hauptverfasser: Block, Richard A., Gruber, Ronald P.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This article provides a selective review of time perception research, mainly focusing on the authors' research. Aspects of psychological time include simultaneity, successiveness, temporal order, and duration judgments. In contrast to findings at interstimulus intervals or durations less than 3.0–5.0s, there is little evidence for an “across-senses” effect of perceptual modality (visual vs. auditory) at longer intervals or durations. In addition, the flow of time (events) is a pervasive perceptual illusion, and we review evidence on that. Some temporal information is encoded All rights reserved. relatively automatically into memory: People can judge time-related attributes such as recency, frequency, temporal order, and duration of events. Duration judgments in prospective and retrospective paradigms reveal differences between them, as well as variables that moderate the processes involved. An attentional-gate model is needed to account for prospective judgments, and a contextual-change model is needed to account for retrospective judgments. •We present a selective review of time perception research.•Various processes are involved in psychological timing•We focus especially on the flow of time as it involves happening.•Applications arise by considering models of prospective and retrospective timing.•Psychological times (past, present, future) are not as dictated by physicists.
ISSN:0001-6918
1873-6297
DOI:10.1016/j.actpsy.2013.11.003