Literature DB >> 12188524

Speeding up an internal clock in children? Effects of visual flicker on subjective duration.

Sylvie Droit-Volet1, John Wearden.   

Abstract

Children of 3, 5, and 8 years of age were trained on a temporal bisection task where visual stimuli in the form of blue circles of 200 and 800 ms or 400 and 1600 ms duration, preceded by a 5-s white circle, served as the short and long standards. Following discrimination training between the standards, stimuli in the ranges 20-800 ms or 400-1,600 ms were presented with the white circle either constant or flickering. Relative to the constant white circle, the flicker (1) increased the proportion of "long" responses (responses appropriate to the long standard), (2) shifted the psychophysical functions to the left, (3) decreased bisection point values, at all ages, and (4) did not systematically affect measures of temporal sensitivity, such as difference limen and Weber ratio. The results were consistent with the idea that the repetitive flicker had increased the speed of the pacemaker of an internal clock in children as young as 3 years. The "pacemaker speed" interpretation of the results was further strengthened by a greater effect of flicker in the 400/ 1,600-ms condition than in the 200/800-ms condition.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12188524     DOI: 10.1080/02724990143000252

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Q J Exp Psychol B        ISSN: 0272-4995


  33 in total

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10.  Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders have "the working raw material" for time perception.

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