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Perceived time is spatial frequency dependent.

C Aaen-Stockdale1, J Hotchkiss, J Heron

  • 1Bradford School of Optometry & Vision Science, University of Bradford, UK. c.aaen-stockdale@bradford.ac.uk

Vision Research
|April 12, 2011
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Visual perception of time is affected by spatial frequency. Mid-range spatial frequencies appear longer, challenging previous findings on subjective time expansion and auditory-visual duration biases.

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Area of Science:

  • Visual Perception
  • Psychophysics
  • Cognitive Neuroscience

Background:

  • Previous research indicates that infrequent

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the impact of spatial frequency on perceived stimulus duration.
  • To determine if spatial frequency changes can elicit subjective time expansion.
  • To explore the relationship between visual persistence and spatial frequency.

Main Methods:

  • Gabor patches with varying spatial frequencies (0.5, 2, and 8 c/deg) were used as standard and oddball stimuli.
  • Stimuli were equated for visibility to isolate the effect of spatial frequency.
  • Participants judged the perceived duration of visual stimuli.

Main Results:

  • Contrary to expectations, perceived duration expanded or contracted based on the spatial frequency relationship between standard and oddball stimuli.
  • Mid-range spatial frequencies (approx. 2 c/deg) were consistently perceived as longer than low or high frequencies, irrespective of physical duration.
  • This duration bias was additive, not proportional, suggesting variations in visual persistence across spatial frequencies.

Conclusions:

  • Spatial frequency significantly modulates the perceived duration of visual stimuli.
  • The findings challenge the notion of a universal subjective time expansion for oddball stimuli.
  • Results suggest that differences in visual persistence across spatial frequencies contribute to duration perception biases, with implications for auditory-visual duration comparisons.