Abstract

This study examined the effects of emotion on implicit timing. In the implicit timing task used, the participants did not receive any temporal instructions. Instead they were simply asked and trained to press a key as quickly as possible after a stimulus (response stimulus) that was separated from a preceding stimulus by a given temporal interval (reference interval duration). However, in the testing phase, the interval duration was the reference interval duration or a shorter or longer interval duration. In addition, the participants attended two sessions: a first baseline session in which no stimulus was presented during the inter-stimulus intervals, and a second emotional session in which emotional facial expressions (angry, neutral and sad facial expressions) were presented during these intervals. Results showed faster RTs for interval durations close to the reference duration in both the baseline and the emotional conditions and yielded a U-shaped curve. This suggests that implicit processing of time persists in emotional contexts. In addition, the RT was faster for the facial expressions of anger than for those of neutrality and sadness. However, the U-shaped RT curve did not peak clearly at a shorter interval duration for the angry than for the other facial expressions. This lack of time distortion in an implicit timing task in response to arousing emotional stimuli questions the idea of an automatic speeding-up of the interval clock system involved in the representation of time.

Highlights

  • Subjective time is distorted under the effect of emotion

  • The significant effect of interval duration indicated that reaction time (RT) was affected by the temporal interval before the response signal, i.e. a finding that is consistent with the implicit processing of time

  • Our results showed that the speed of RT depended on the inter-signal interval duration

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Summary

Introduction

Subjective time is distorted under the effect of emotion. For example, time seems to speed up in dangerous situations when a person threatens to attack us. Results showed that, compared to other facial expressions, the participants more often associated the angry faces with the long than with the short standard duration This temporal lengthening effect in response to angry faces has since been replicated with different negative high-arousing emotional stimuli (e.g., affective pictures, sounds, electric shocks) [3,4,5,6,7]. This emotional effect on time judgment has generally been explained as resulting

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