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Lifting, tasting, and carrying: The interaction of magnitude and valence effects in time perception
Magnitude effects (e.g., heavier or faster is longer) and valence effects (e.g., negative > positive) are widely observed in time perception studies, but not well understood. In four experiments, we explored how different action contexts (e.g., tasting, lifting) affected magnitude and valence eff...
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Published in: | Acta psychologica 2019-02, Vol.193, p.1-10 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Magnitude effects (e.g., heavier or faster is longer) and valence effects (e.g., negative > positive) are widely observed in time perception studies, but not well understood. In four experiments, we explored how different action contexts (e.g., tasting, lifting) affected magnitude and valence effects. In two experiments a valence effect occurred: Tasting a sweet food (watermelon) led to temporal underestimations relative to a neutral stimulus, while sour and bitter foods led to overestimations. However, when the same foods were presented in a lifting context a magnitude effect occurred: Reproduced times for the heavier food (watermelon) were overestimated relative to the lighter foods. In a fourth experiment magnitude and valence interacted: Imagining tasting increasing amounts of lemon or carrying increasing loads of lemon, both negative, yielded magnitude effects; however, imagining carrying lemons to feed malnourished people, which was positive, did not. Results present challenges for several common theoretical approaches (e.g., arousal, attention, common magnitude theory) but provide support for affordance theory and perceptual salience theory. Timing depends on action relevance and is jointly shaped by valence and magnitude.
•Magnitude and valence effects in time perception occurred in three action contexts.•Perceived duration depended on action relevance, valence of action, and magnitude.•Magnitude effects occurred in negative valence contexts but not positive.•Lifting, tasting, and carrying different foods (e.g., lemons) altered relative timing.•Heavier was longer and negative was longer in time perception, but not always. |
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ISSN: | 0001-6918 1873-6297 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.actpsy.2018.11.010 |