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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 22, 2026

A Semantic Priming Event-related Potential (ERP) Task to Study Lexico-semantic and Visuo-semantic Processing in Autism Spectrum Disorder
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A Semantic Priming Event-related Potential (ERP) Task to Study Lexico-semantic and Visuo-semantic Processing in Autism Spectrum Disorder

Published on: April 12, 2018

Priming the mental time line.

Maria Grazia Di Bono1, Marco Casarotti, Konstantinos Priftis

  • 1Department of General Psychology and Centre for Cognitive Science,University of Padova, Padova, Italy. mariagrazia.dibono@unipd.it

Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human Perception and Performance
|May 9, 2012
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study shows that visual cues on the left speed up judgments of short auditory durations, while cues on the right speed up judgments of long durations, supporting a left-to-right mental timeline.

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Examining Recall Memory in Infancy and Early Childhood Using the Elicited Imitation Paradigm
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A Semantic Priming Event-related Potential (ERP) Task to Study Lexico-semantic and Visuo-semantic Processing in Autism Spectrum Disorder
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Examining Recall Memory in Infancy and Early Childhood Using the Elicited Imitation Paradigm
06:35

Examining Recall Memory in Infancy and Early Childhood Using the Elicited Imitation Paradigm

Published on: April 28, 2016

Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Psycholinguistics

Background:

  • Experimental evidence suggests time is represented on a left-to-right mental timeline.
  • Previous studies often used spatially organized responses or stimuli with confounding spatial-temporal dimensions.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate if task-irrelevant, lateralized visuospatial primes influence auditory duration judgments.
  • To test the hypothesis of a spatially organized mental timeline for time representation.

Main Methods:

  • Auditory duration judgments were measured.
  • Task-irrelevant, lateralized visuospatial primes (left vs. right) were presented concurrently with auditory targets.
  • The Spatial-Temporal Association of Response Codes (STARCH) effect was controlled for.

Main Results:

  • Responses to short auditory durations were faster with left-sided primes.
  • Responses to long auditory durations were faster with right-sided primes.
  • This time-space interaction occurred even without a required spatially encoded response.

Conclusions:

  • Physical space influences time perception even when not task-relevant.
  • Findings support a mental timeline where short durations are on the left and long durations are on the right.
  • The observed effect is distinct from the Spatial-Temporal Association of Response Codes (STARCH) effect.