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Evaluation of Hemisphere Lateralization with Bilateral Local Field Potential Recording in Secondary Motor Cortex of Mice
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Published on: July 31, 2019

Lateral head turning affects temporal memory.

Carmelo Mario Vicario1, Davide Martino, Enea Francesco Pavone

  • 1Sector of Cognitive Neuroscience, SISSA, Trieste, Italy. cvicario@sissa.it

Perceptual and Motor Skills
|October 13, 2011
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Head posture influences time perception. Rightward head rotation led to overestimating longer time intervals, suggesting spatial attention affects time processing.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Psychology

Background:

  • Spatial attention is crucial for environmental processing and links magnitudes like space, time, and numbers.
  • The relationship between spatial attention shifts and temporal estimation remains an area of investigation.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate if rotational head movements, altering spatial attention coordinates, impact the estimation of time durations.
  • To determine if head posture affects the accuracy of temporal interval reproduction.

Main Methods:

  • A computer-based implicit timing task was used.
  • Participants reported on stimulus color changes and reproduced temporal durations (5-80 seconds) via keyboard input.
  • Head posture was manipulated through rotational movements.

Main Results:

  • A statistically significant overestimation of 80-second intervals occurred specifically with rightward head rotation.
  • Head posture did not influence the timing performance for shorter intervals.
  • This suggests a directional effect of spatial attention on time perception.

Conclusions:

  • Spatial attention coordinates demonstrably influence time processing abilities.
  • Findings support the existence of shared cortical metrics for space and time in humans.
  • Head orientation can modulate the subjective experience of time duration.