Duration channels mediate human time perception
Heron, James ; Aaen-Stockdale, Craig ; Hotchkiss, John ; Roach, N.W. ; McGraw, Paul V. ; Whitaker, David J.
Heron, James
Aaen-Stockdale, Craig
Hotchkiss, John
Roach, N.W.
McGraw, Paul V.
Whitaker, David J.
Publication Date
2012
End of Embargo
Supervisor
Rights
Peer-Reviewed
Open Access status
closedAccess
Accepted for publication
Institution
Department
Awarded
Embargo end date
Collections
Additional title
Abstract
The task of deciding how long sensory events seem to last is one that the human nervous system appears to perform rapidly and, for sub-second intervals, seemingly without conscious effort. That these estimates can be performed within and between multiple sensory and motor domains suggest time perception forms one of the core, fundamental processes of our perception of the world around us. Given this significance, the current paucity in our understanding of how this process operates is surprising. One candidate mechanism for duration perception posits that duration may be mediated via a system of duration-selective 'channels', which are differentially activated depending on the match between afferent duration information and the channels' 'preferred' duration. However, this model awaits experimental validation. In the current study, we use the technique of sensory adaptation, and we present data that are well described by banks of duration channels that are limited in their bandwidth, sensory-specific, and appear to operate at a relatively early stage of visual and auditory sensory processing. Our results suggest that many of the computational principles the nervous system applies to coding visual spatial and auditory spectral information are common to its processing of temporal extent.
Version
No full-text in the repository
Citation
Heron, J., Aaen-Stockdale, C., Hotchkiss, J., Roach, N. W., McGraw, P. V., Whitaker, D. (2012) Duration channels mediate human time perception. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Biological Sciences, 279 (1729), 690-698.
Link to publisher’s version
Link to published version
Link to Version of Record
Type
Article