Abstract

Evidence suggests that human timing ability is compromised by heat. In particular, some studies suggest that increasing body temperature speeds up an internal clock, resulting in faster time perception. However, the consequences of this speed-up for other cognitive processes remain unknown. In the current study, we rigorously tested the speed-up hypothesis by inducing passive hyperthermia through immersion of participants in warm water. In addition, we tested how a change in time perception affects performance in decision making under deadline stress. We found that participants underestimate a prelearned temporal interval when body temperature increases, and that their performance in a two-alternative forced-choice task displays signatures of increased time pressure. These results show not only that timing plays an important role in decision-making, but also that this relationship is mediated by temperature. The consequences for decision-making in job environments that are demanding due to changes in body temperature may be considerable.

Highlights

  • We confirmed that changes in core temperature induce faster temporal processing

  • A small number of studies have investigated the existence of a temperature-sensitive internal clock[25,26,42]

  • These studies suggested that core temperature speeds up an internal clock, resulting in shorter reproductions of temporal durations[25]

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Summary

Introduction

Consistent with our hypotheses, we found that participants in the Warm condition provided shorter estimates of the temporal interval at the end of the hot tub session, relative to a baseline out-of-tub measurement (Fig. 3A and Table 1). We predicted that the observed speed up in choice response times with body temperature was larger for participants that more strongly underproduced the temporal interval.

Results
Conclusion

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