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Riemer, Martin; Trojan, Jorg; Kleinbohl, Dieter; Holzl, Rupert – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
Systematic errors in time reproduction tasks have been interpreted as a misperception of time and therefore seem to contradict basic assumptions of pacemaker-accumulator models. Here we propose an alternative explanation of this phenomenon based on methodological constraints regarding the direction of time, which cannot be manipulated in…
Descriptors: Time Perspective, Models, Error Patterns, Duplication
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Hartcher-O'Brien, Jessica; Alais, David – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
This study examines how audiovisual signals are combined in time for a temporal analogue of the ventriloquist effect in a purely temporal context, that is, no spatial grounding of signals or other spatial facilitation. Observers were presented with two successive intervals, each defined by a 1250-ms tone, and indicated in which interval a brief…
Descriptors: Intervals, Computation, Observation, Research Methodology
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Jefferies, Lisa N.; Di Lollo, Vincent – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
This research examined changes in the spatial extent of focal attention over time. The Attentional Blink (impaired perception of the second of two targets) and Lag-1 sparing (the seemingly paradoxical finding that second-target accuracy is high when the second target immediately follows the first) were employed in a dual-stream paradigm to index…
Descriptors: Change, Spatial Ability, Asynchronous Communication, Attention
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Doumas, Michail; Wing, Alan M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2007
The Wing-Kristofferson movement timing model (A. M. Wing & A. B. Kristofferson, 1973a, 1973b) distinguishes central timer and motor implementation processes. Previous studies have shown that increases in interresponse interval (IRI) variability with mean IRI are due to central timer processes, not motor implementation. The authors examine whether…
Descriptors: Intervals, Context Effect, Time Perspective, Models
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West, Greg L.; Anderson, Adam A. K.; Pratt, Jay – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
Previous studies that have found attentional capture effects for stimuli of motivational significance do not directly measure initial attentional deployment, leaving it unclear to what extent these items produce attentional capture. Visual prior entry, as measured by temporal order judgments (TOJs), rests on the premise that allocated attention…
Descriptors: Serial Ordering, Time Perspective, Spatial Ability, Attention