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Regular articles

The effect of mild depression on time discrimination

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Pages 632-645 | Received 01 Dec 2010, Published online: 07 Feb 2012
 

Abstract

Depressed mood states affect subjective perceptions of time but it is not clear whether this is due to changes in the underlying timing mechanisms, such as the speed of the internal clock. In order to study depression effects on time perception, two experiments using time discrimination methods with short (<300 ms) and long (>1,000 ms) durations were conducted. Student participants who were categorized as mildly depressed by their scores on the Beck Depression Inventory were less able than controls to discriminate between two longer durations but were equally able to discriminate shorter intervals. The results suggest that mildly depressed or dysphoric moods do not affect pacemaker speed. It is more likely that depression affects the ability to maintain attention to elapsing duration.

Notes

1 All analyses in Experiments 1 and 2 were carried out including sex as a variable. Sex on its own did not have a reliable effect on discrimination threshold or in interaction with mood, all p > .25. This variable was not of interest in the present study and was not included in any of the analyses reported here.

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