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Where Does Time Go When You Blink?

Retinal input is frequently lost because of eye blinks, yet humans rarely notice these gaps in visual input. Although previous studies focused on the perceptual and neural correlates of diminished awareness to blinks, the impact of these correlates on the perceived time of concurrent events is unkno...

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Published in:Psychological science 2019-06, Vol.30 (6), p.907-916
Main Authors: Grossman, Shany, Gueta, Chen, Pesin, Slav, Malach, Rafael, Landau, Ayelet N.
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Language:English
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creator Grossman, Shany
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description Retinal input is frequently lost because of eye blinks, yet humans rarely notice these gaps in visual input. Although previous studies focused on the perceptual and neural correlates of diminished awareness to blinks, the impact of these correlates on the perceived time of concurrent events is unknown. Here, we investigated whether the subjective sense of time is altered by spontaneous blinks. We found that participants (N = 22) significantly underestimated the duration of a visual stimulus when a spontaneous blink occurred during stimulus presentation and that this underestimation was correlated with the blink duration of individual participants. Importantly, the effect was not present when durations of an auditory stimulus were judged (N = 23). The results point to a link between spontaneous blinks, previously demonstrated to induce activity suppression in the visual cortex, and a compression of subjective time. They suggest that ongoing encoding within modality-specific sensory cortices, independent of conscious awareness, informs the subjective sense of time.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0956797619842198
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); SAGE
subjects Cortex
Encoding
Research Article
Stimulus
Time use
title Where Does Time Go When You Blink?
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