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Original Articles

Subjective shortening with filled and unfilled auditory and visual intervals in humans?

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Pages 1616-1628 | Received 19 May 2006, Accepted 26 Aug 2006, Published online: 06 Nov 2007
 

Abstract

Two experiments tested humans on a memory for duration task based on the method of Wearden and Ferrara Citation(1993), which had previously provided evidence for subjective shortening in memory for stimulus duration. Auditory stimuli were tones (filled) or click-defined intervals (unfilled). Filled visual stimuli were either squares or lines, with the unfilled interval being the time between two line presentations. In Experiment 1, good evidence for subjective shortening was found when filled and unfilled visual stimuli, or filled auditory stimuli, were used, but evidence for subjective shortening with unfilled auditory stimuli was more ambiguous. Experiment 2 used a simplified variant of the Wearden and Ferrara task, and evidence for subjective shortening was obtained from all four stimulus types.

Karin Foran conducted some of the experimental work reported here while a student in the then-titled Department of Psychology at Manchester University.

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