Abstract

The aim of the present study was to test how the perception of an emotional stimulus colors the temporal context of judgment and modifies the participant’s perception of the current neutral duration. Participants were given two ready-set-go tasks consisting of a distribution of short (0.5–0.9 s) or long sample intervals (0.9–1.3 s) with an overlapping 0.9-s interval. Additional intervals were introduced in the temporal distribution. These were neutral for the two temporal tasks in a control condition and emotional for the short, but not the long temporal task in an emotion condition. The results indicated a replication of a kind of Vierordt’s law in the control condition, i.e., the temporal judgment toward the mean of the distribution of sample intervals (central tendency effect). However, there was a shift in the central tendency effect in the emotion condition indicating a general bias in the form of an overestimation of current intervals linked to the presence of a few emotional stimuli among the previous intervals. This finding is entirely consistent with timing mechanisms driven by prior duration context, particularly experience of prior emotional duration.

Highlights

  • The number of studies devoted to time and emotion has been constantly growing

  • The same sample interval (0.9 s) was judged shorter when included in a temporal context with shorter (M = 0.851, SD = 0.30) rather than longer (M = 0.933, SD = 0.287) sample intervals

  • The originality of our results was to find an overestimation of sample intervals despite there were included in a short interval distribution when a small proportion of intervals (0.16) were emotional

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Summary

Introduction

The number of studies devoted to time and emotion has been constantly growing. Time distortions embedded in an emotional phenomenon are complex, investigators have observed that threatening stimuli produce an increase in estimated durations This lengthening effect is thought to result from the arousal dimension of significant stimuli, which in turn accelerates the internal clock system during the measurement of time. Transient inhibition or activation of dopaminergic neurons would explain the lengthening or shortening of time estimates (Cheng et al, 2016; Soares et al, 2016) These studies have investigated the immediate effect of emotion on time judgment, but not how the prior temporal experience of an emotional stimulus influences the time measurement of other encountered stimuli. The aim of the present study was to test how the perception of an emotional stimulus colors the temporal context of judgment and modifies the participant’s decision on the current stimulus duration

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