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Why do temporal generalization gradients change when people make decisions as quickly as possible?

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Pages 1646-1664 | Received 30 Jun 2010, Accepted 15 Dec 2010, Published online: 10 May 2011
 

Abstract

Three experiments investigated temporal generalization performance under conditions in which participants were instructed to make their decisions as quickly as possible (speed), or were allowed to take their time (accuracy). A previous study (Klapproth & Müller, 2008) had shown that under speeded conditions people were more likely to confuse durations shorter than the standard with the standard than in the accuracy conditions, and a possible explanation of this result is that longer stimulus durations are “truncated” (i.e., people make a judgement about them before they have terminated, thereby shortening their effective duration) and that these truncated durations affect the standard used for the task. Experiment 1 investigated performance under speed and accuracy conditions when comparison durations were close to the standard or further away. No performance difference was found as a function of stimulus spacing, even though responses occurred on average before the longest durations had terminated, but this lack of effect was attributed to “task difficulty” effects changing decision thresholds. In Experiment 2, the standard duration was either the longest or the shortest duration in the comparison set, and differences between speed and accuracy groups occurred only when the comparisons were longer than the standard, supporting the “truncation” hypothesis. A third experiment showed that differences between speed and accuracy groups only occurred if some memory of the standard that was valid for more than one trial was used. In general, the results suggest that the generalization gradient shifts in speeded conditions occur because of truncation of longer comparison durations, which influences the effective standard used for the task.

Acknowledgments

This research was supported by a grant provided by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Research Foundation, Grant KL 1853/3–1). Florian Klapproth is now at the University of Luxembourg, Campus Walferdange, Luxembourg. We thank Katrin Benner, Michael Riedlberger, and Zeynep Yildiz who cared for the participants.

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