Abstract

We investigated perceived timing in auditory rate perception using a reproduction task. The study aimed to test (a) whether central tendency occurs in rate perception, as shown for interval timing, and (b) whether rate is perceived independently on each trial or shows a serial dependence, as shown for other perceptual attributes. Participants were well able to indicate perceived rate as reproduced and presented rates were linearly related with a slope that approached unity, although tapping significantly overestimated presented rates. While the slopes approached unity, they were significantly less than 1, indicating a central tendency in which reproduced rates tended towards the mean of the presented range. We tested for serial dependency by seeing if current trial rate reproductions depended on the preceding rate. In two conditions, a positive dependence was observed. A third condition in which participants withheld responses on every second trial produced a negative dependency. These results suggest separate components of serial dependence linked to stimulus and response: Withholding responses reveals a negative perceptual effect, whereas making responses adds a stronger positive effect that is postperceptual and makes the combined effect positive. Together, these data show that auditory rate perception exhibits both central tendency and serial dependence effects.

Highlights

  • We investigated perceived timing in auditory rate perception using a reproduction task

  • A slope less than 1 means that the range of reproduced rates was compressed relative to the presented range, a feature indicative of central tendency which has been observed in others studies of temporal perception (Jazayeri & Shadlen, 2010)

  • Responses to predictable stimuli are faster (Jazayeri & Shadlen, 2015; Miyazaki et al, 2005) and in a reproduction task involving multiple taps, errors may accumulate over the response period to inflate the average rate

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Summary

Introduction

We investigated perceived timing in auditory rate perception using a reproduction task. We predict that there will be a central tendency effect in the reproduced auditory rates, as found in previous timing research, but that we will find evidence for serial dependence.

Results
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