Abstract

Previous research into emotion and time perception has been designed to study the time perception of emotional events themselves (e.g., facial expression). Our aim was to investigate the effect of emotions per se on the subsequent time judgment of a neutral, non-affective event. In the present study, the participants were presented with films inducing a specific mood and were subsequently given a temporal bisection task. More precisely, the participants were given two temporal bisection tasks, one before and the other after viewing the emotional film. Three emotional films were tested: one eliciting fear, another sadness, and a neutral control film. In addition, the direct mood experience was assessed using the Brief Mood Introspective Scale that was administered to the participants at the beginning and the end of the session. The results showed that the perception of time did not change after viewing either the neutral control films or the sad films although the participants reported being sadder and less aroused after than before watching the sad film clips. In contrast, the stimulus durations were judged longer after than before viewing the frightening films that were judged to increase the emotion of fear and arousal level. In combination with findings from previous studies, our data suggest that the selective lengthening effect after watching frightening films was mediated by an effect of arousal on the speed of the internal clock system.

Highlights

  • In everyday life, the experience of a mood changes our relationship with time

  • There was a significant interaction between the mood adjectives and the bisection phases in each emotional condition [Fear, F (17, 748) = 19.74, Sadness, F (17, 748) = 15.52, and Neutral, F (17, 748) = 8.19, p < 0.05]

  • We showed our participants validated emotional films that lasted for long periods (9 min) in order to modify their general mood

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Summary

Introduction

The experience of a mood changes our relationship with time. When we are sad and depressed we have the feeling that the flow of time slows down. Every hour seems like an eternity, as if time had stopped. The feeling of stress seems to accelerate the flow of time. These mood-related fluctuations in our experience of time have often been described, they have rarely been experimentally studied. We do not know whether these explicit judgments concerning the passage of time correspond to a reality experienced in our bodies or brains

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