Abstract
Commentary: Time perception deficits and its dose-dependent effect in methamphetamine dependents with short-term abstinence.
Highlights
Reviewed by: Yan-Xue Xue, Peking University, China Jianfeng Liu, Texas A&M University, United States James P
There is still a lack of systematic investigation on the change of time perception of human methamphetamine dependents and the association with drug use history. These understandings were addressed in a recent study published in the journal of Science Advances, Zhang et al They recruited a large number of healthy people in communities and methamphetamine dependents at different periods of withdrawal in drug rehabilitation institutions
This study systematically explored the changes in motor timing and perceptual timing components of time perception in methamphetamine dependents, as well as their relationship with the amount of methamphetamine use before abstinence, using time reproduction and comparison tasks at different intervals
Summary
Reviewed by: Yan-Xue Xue, Peking University, China Jianfeng Liu, Texas A&M University, United States James P. Yang W (2020) Commentary: Time perception deficits and its dose-dependent effect in methamphetamine dependents with short-term abstinence. There is still a lack of systematic investigation on the change of time perception of human methamphetamine dependents and the association with drug use history.
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