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Real-time Pressure-volume Analysis of Acute Myocardial Infarction in Mice
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Time flies faster under time pressure.

Anne-Claire Rattat1, Pauline Matha2, Julien Cegarra1

  • 1Cognition Sciences, Technology, Ergonomics (SCoTE) Laboratory (EA 7420), National University Institute Champollion, University of Toulouse, Albi, France.

Acta Psychologica
|February 7, 2018
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Time pressure makes duration estimation longer in both verbal and production tasks. This temporal overestimation effect did not change with longer target durations, suggesting consistent impacts of time constraints on time perception.

Keywords:
ArousalAttentionTime estimationTime pressureTime production

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Psychophysics

Background:

  • Time perception is crucial for daily activities.
  • Understanding factors influencing time estimation, like time pressure, is important.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the impact of time pressure on duration estimation.
  • To compare effects in verbal estimation and production tasks.

Main Methods:

  • Participants performed maze-solving tasks under time pressure and no-pressure conditions.
  • Two tasks were used: verbal estimation and production.
  • Target durations were 30, 60, and 90 seconds.

Main Results:

  • Durations were judged as longer under time pressure across both tasks.
  • Temporal overestimation did not escalate with increasing target duration.

Conclusions:

  • Time pressure consistently leads to overestimation of duration.
  • Scalar expectancy theory may explain these findings on time perception.