| Literature DB >> 22654742 |
Zhuanghua Shi1, Lina Jia, Hermann J Müller.
Abstract
Judging the duration of emotional stimuli is known to be influenced by their valence and arousal values. However, whether and how perceiving emotion in one modality affects time perception in another modality is still unclear. To investigate this, we compared the influence of different types of emotional pictures-a picture of threat, disgust, or a neutral picture presented at the start of a trial-on temporal bisection judgments of the duration of a subsequently presented vibrotactile stimulus. We found an overestimation of tactile duration following exposure to pictures of threat, but not pictures of disgust (even though these scored equally high on arousal), in a short-range temporal bisection task (range 300/900 ms). Follow-up experiments revealed that this duration lengthening effect was abolished when the range to be bisected was increased (1000/1900 ms). However, duration overestimation was maintained in the short-range bisection task regardless of whether the interval between the visual and tactile events was short or long. This pattern is inconsistent with a general arousal interpretation of duration distortion and suggests that crossmodal linkages in the processing of emotions and emotional regulation are two main factors underlying the manifestation of crossmodal duration modulation.Entities:
Keywords: duration estimation; embodiment; emotion; threat; visual-tactile interaction
Year: 2012 PMID: 22654742 PMCID: PMC3358720 DOI: 10.3389/fnint.2012.00024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Integr Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5145
IAPS stimuli used in the current study.
| Mutilation pictures | 3030 | Mutilation |
| 3053 | Burn victim | |
| 3060 | Mutilation | |
| 3071 | Mutilation | |
| 3120 | Dead body | |
| Animal or human attacking pictures | 1052 | Snake |
| 1120 | Snake | |
| 1201 | Spider | |
| 1300 | Pit bull | |
| 1321 | Bear | |
| 1930 | Shark | |
| 6250 | Aimed gun | |
| 6260 | Aimed gun | |
| 6300 | Knife | |
| 6510 | Attack | |
| Neutral pictures | 2840 | Chess |
| 5500 | Mush room | |
| 7000 | Rolling pin | |
| 7009 | Mug | |
| 7035 | Mug | |
| 7041 | Baskets | |
| 7050 | Hair driver | |
| 7059 | Key ring | |
| 7090 | Book | |
| 7140 | Bus | |
| 7150 | Umbrella | |
| 7161 | Pole | |
| 7185 | Abstract art | |
| 7224 | File cabinets | |
| 7233 | Plate | |
| 7235 | Chair | |
| 7490 | Window | |
| 7700 | Office | |
| 7705 | Cabinet |
Figure 1Mean proportions of “Long” responses plotted against probe durations and fitted psychometric functions for three emotion conditions (neutral, threat, and disgust). The dotted curve and crosses represent the neutral condition, the dash-dotted curve and pluses the disgust condition, and the solid curve and diamonds the threat condition.
Figure 2(A) Mean temporal bisection points and (B) mean JNDs (and associated standard errors) for three emotional conditions (n = 14).
Figure 3(A) Mean temporal bisection points and (B) mean JNDs (and associated standard errors) plotted against threat and neutral picture conditions, for the short-range (300/900 ms) and the long-range (1000/1900 ms) sessions (n = 15).
Figure 4(A) Mean temporal bisection points and (B) mean JNDs (and associated standard errors) plotted against threat and neutral picture conditions, for the short-ISI (500 ms) and the long-ISI (1000 ms) session (n = 16).