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William Curran; Christopher P. Benton – Cognition, 2012
Event duration perception is fundamental to cognitive functioning. Recent research has shown that localized sensory adaptation compresses perceived duration of brief visual events in the adapted location; however, there is disagreement on whether the source of these temporal distortions is cortical or pre-cortical. The current study reveals that…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Brain, Cognitive Processes, Perception
Jepma, Marieke; Wagenmakers, Eric-Jan; Nieuwenhuis, Sander – Cognition, 2012
People are able to use temporal cues to anticipate the timing of an event, enabling them to process that event more efficiently. We conducted two experiments, using the fixed-foreperiod paradigm (Experiment 1) and the temporal-cueing paradigm (Experiment 2), to assess which components of information processing are speeded when subjects use such…
Descriptors: Expectation, Cues, Reaction Time, Models
Lew-Williams, Casey; Saffran, Jenny R. – Cognition, 2012
Infants have been described as "statistical learners" capable of extracting structure (such as words) from patterned input (such as language). Here, we investigated whether prior knowledge influences how infants track transitional probabilities in word segmentation tasks. Are infants biased by prior experience when engaging in sequential…
Descriptors: Infants, Language Acquisition, Linguistic Input, Prior Learning
Boroditsky, Lera; Fuhrman, Orly; McCormick, Kelly – Cognition, 2011
Time is a fundamental domain of experience. In this paper we ask whether aspects of language and culture affect how people think about this domain. Specifically, we consider whether English and Mandarin speakers think about time differently. We review all of the available evidence both for and against this hypothesis, and report new data that…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Mandarin Chinese, English, Native Speakers
Russell, James; Alexis, Dean; Clayton, Nicola – Cognition, 2010
Assessing children's episodic future thinking by having them select items for future use may be assessing their functional reasoning about the future rather than their future episodic thinking. In an attempt to circumvent this problem, we capitalised on the fact that episodic cognition necessarily has a spatial format ([Clayton and Russell, 2009]…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Cognitive Processes, Play, Time Perspective
Nunez, Rafael; Cooperrider, Kensy; Doan, D.; Wassmann, Jurg – Cognition, 2012
Time, an everyday yet fundamentally abstract domain, is conceptualized in terms of space throughout the world's cultures. Linguists and psychologists have presented evidence of a widespread pattern in which deictic time--past, present, and future--is construed along the front/back axis, a construal that is "linear" and…
Descriptors: Evidence, Topography, Foreign Countries, Spatial Ability
Schreij, Daniel; Olivers, Christian N. L. – Cognition, 2009
Previous research has revealed that we create and maintain mental representations for perceived objects on the basis of their spatiotemporal continuity. An important question is what type of information can be maintained within these so-called object files. We provide evidence that object files retain specific attentional control settings for…
Descriptors: Cognitive Structures, Visualization, Spatial Ability, Time Perspective
Srinivasan, Mahesh; Carey, Susan – Cognition, 2010
When we describe time, we often use the language of space ("The movie was long"; "The deadline is approaching"). Experiments 1-3 asked whether--as patterns in language suggest--a structural similarity between representations of spatial length and temporal duration is easier to access than one between length and other dimensions of experience, such…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Cues, Infants, Experiments
Ono, Fuminori; Kitazawa, Shigeru – Cognition, 2010
The present study examined the effect of perceived motion-in-depth on temporal interval perception. We required subjects to estimate the length of a short empty interval starting from the offset of a first marker and ending with the onset of a second marker. The size of the markers was manipulated so that the subjects perceived a visual object as…
Descriptors: Intervals, Motion, Visual Perception, Time Perspective
Day, Samuel B.; Bartels, Daniel M. – Cognition, 2008
Similarity is central in human cognition, playing a role in a wide range of cognitive processes. In three studies, we demonstrate that subjective similarity may change as a function of temporal distance, with some events seeming more similar when considered in the near future, while others increase in similarity as temporal distance increases.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Time Perspective, Case Studies
Gutheil, Grant; Gelman, Susan A.; Klein, Eileen; Michos, Katherine; Kelaita, Kara – Cognition, 2008
Humans construe their environment as composed largely of discrete individuals, which are also members of kinds (e.g., trees, cars, and people). On what basis do young children determine individual identity? How important are featural properties (e.g., physical appearance, name) relative to spatiotemporal history? Two studies examined the relative…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Physical Characteristics, Preschool Children, Adults
Chen, Jenn-Yeu – Cognition, 2007
English uses the horizontal spatial metaphors to express time (e.g., the good days ahead of us). Chinese also uses the vertical metaphors (e.g., "the month above" to mean last month). Do Chinese speakers, then, think about time in a different way than English speakers? Boroditsky [Boroditsky, L. (2001). "Does language shape thought? Mandarin and…
Descriptors: Mandarin Chinese, Cognitive Psychology, Time Perspective, English
Fabre, Ludovic; Lemaire, Patrick; Grainger, Jonathan – Cognition, 2007
Three experiments examined the effects of temporal attention and aging on masked repetition and categorical priming for numbers and words. Participants' temporal attention was manipulated by varying the stimulus onset asynchrony (i.e., constant or variable SOA). In Experiment 1, participants performed a parity judgment task and a lexical decision…
Descriptors: Semantics, Young Adults, Classification, Bilingualism
Hirai, Masahiro; Hiraki, Kazuo – Cognition, 2006
We investigated how the spatiotemporal structure of animations of biological motion (BM) affects brain activity. We measured event-related potentials (ERPs) during the perception of BM under four conditions: normal spatial and temporal structure; scrambled spatial and normal temporal structure; normal spatial and scrambled temporal structure; and…
Descriptors: Motion, Perception, Cognitive Processes, Reaction Time