Abstract

Previous research has shown that explicit emotional content or physical image properties (e.g., luminance, size, and numerosity) alter subjective duration. Palumbo recently demonstrated that the presence or absence of abstract reflectional symmetry also influenced subjective duration. Here, we explored this phenomenon further by varying the type of symmetry (reflection or rotation) and the objective duration of stimulus presentation (less or more than 1 second). Experiment 1 used a verbal estimation task in which participants estimated the presentation duration of reflection, rotation symmetry, or random square-field patterns. Longer estimates were given for reflectional symmetry images than rotation or random, but only when the image was presented for less than 1 second. There was no difference between rotation and random. These findings were confirmed by a second experiment using a paired-comparison task. This temporal distortion could be because reflection has positive valence or because it is processed efficiently be the visual system. The mechanism remains to be determined. We are relatively sure, however, that reflectional patterns can increase subjective duration in the absence of explicit semantic content, and in the absence of changes in the size, luminance, or numerosity in the images.

Highlights

  • It is well established that subjective estimates of duration can differ from actual stimulus duration

  • High-arousal positive images are associated with relatively shorter duration estimates, whereas low-arousal images are associated with relatively longer duration estimates (Angrilli, Cherubini, Pavese, & Mantredini, 1997; Smith, McIver, Di Nella, & Crease, 2011)

  • These valence-arousal effects can be understood within the framework of scalar expectancy theory (SET; Gibbon, Church, & Meck, 1984)

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Summary

Introduction

It is well established that subjective estimates of duration can differ from actual stimulus duration. The semantic content of an image can alter its perceived duration, as can physical properties like motion, numerosity, luminance, and size This has been studied extensively with emotional images (see Droit-Volet & Meck, 2007 for review), and it has been found that images associated with fear are judged as lasting for longer than neutral images presented for the same duration (Gil & Droit-Volet, 2012). High-arousal positive images are associated with relatively shorter duration estimates, whereas low-arousal images are associated with relatively longer duration estimates (Angrilli, Cherubini, Pavese, & Mantredini, 1997; Smith, McIver, Di Nella, & Crease, 2011) These valence-arousal effects can be understood within the framework of scalar expectancy theory (SET; Gibbon, Church, & Meck, 1984)

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