| Literature DB >> 35879593 |
Xiaobing Cui1, Yu Tian2, Li Zhang1,3, Yang Chen1, Youling Bai1,3, Dan Li1,3, Jinping Liu4, Philip Gable5, Huazhan Yin6,7.
Abstract
Anecdotal experiences show that the human perception of time is subjective, and changes with one's emotional state. Over the past 25 years, increasing empirical evidence has demonstrated that emotions distort time perception and usually result in overestimation. Yet, some inconsistencies deserve clarification. Specifically, it remains controversial how valence (positive/negative), arousal (high/low), stimulus type (scenic picture/facial expression/word/sound), and temporal paradigm (reproduction/estimation/discrimination) modulate the effect of emotion on time perception. Thus, the current study aimed to conduct a meta-analysis to quantify evidence for these moderators. After searching the Web of Science, SpiScholar, and Google Scholar, 95 effect sizes from 31 empirical studies were calculated using Hedges'g. The included studies involved 3,776 participants. The results a highlighted significant moderating effect of valence, arousal, stimulus type, and temporal paradigm. Specifically, negative valence tends to result in overestimation relative to positive valence; the increasing arousal leads to increasing temporal dilating; scenic picture, facial picture, and sound are more effective in inducing distortions than word; the overestimation can be better observed by discrimination and estimation paradigms relative to reproduction paradigms, and estimation paradigm is likely to be the most effective. These results suggest that the effect of emotion on time perception is influenced by valence, arousal, stimulus type, and temporal paradigm. These mitigating factors should be considered by scientists when studying time perception.Entities:
Keywords: Arousal; Emotional temporal distortion; Meta-analysis; Stimulus type; Temporal paradigm; Valence
Year: 2022 PMID: 35879593 DOI: 10.3758/s13423-022-02148-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychon Bull Rev ISSN: 1069-9384