Abstract

Maintaining accurate and precise temporal perception under conditions of stress is important. Studies in animal models and clinic patients have suggested that time perception can change under chronic stress. Little is known, however, about the relationship between chronic stress and time perception in healthy individuals. Here, a sample of 62 healthy young men completed Cohen’s Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) as a measure of chronic stress levels, while time perception was measured using a temporal bisection task. This task used short (400 ms) and long (1600 ms) visual signals as anchor durations. Participants were presented with a range of intermediate probe durations and were required to judge whether the durations were more similar to the short or the long anchor. Results showed that chronic stress was negatively related to temporal sensitivity indexed by the Weber ratio. However, there was no significant correlation between chronic stress and subjective duration indexed by the bisection point. These results demonstrate that higher chronic stress is associated with lower temporal sensitivity and thus provide evidence for a link between chronic stress and time perception in healthy adults.

Highlights

  • Time perception is fundamental to behaviors that are essential for survival and adaptation, such as conditioning reflexes (Gallistel and Gibbon, 2000), speech recognition (Nourski and Brugge, 2011), and motor control (Buhusi and Meck, 2005)

  • The current study investigated the relationship between chronic stress and time perception in healthy adult males

  • Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) scores were positively correlated with the Weber ratio (WR), indicating that higher levels of chronic stress were associated with reduced temporal sensitivity

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Summary

Introduction

Time perception is fundamental to behaviors that are essential for survival and adaptation, such as conditioning reflexes (Gallistel and Gibbon, 2000), speech recognition (Nourski and Brugge, 2011), and motor control (Buhusi and Meck, 2005). Time perception seems vulnerable to stress (Meck, 1983; Droit-Volet et al, 2010). The relationship between chronic stress and time perception, has scarcely been studied. Subjective duration and temporal sensitivity are two key indicators of different aspects of time perception (Meck, 1983; Grondin and Rammsayer, 2003). Subjective duration refers to one’s perceived duration of a stimulus. Temporal sensitivity refers to one’s ability to discriminate

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