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Wrinkles in subsecond time perception are synchronized to the heart.

Autoren/Mitwirkende
Titel
Wrinkles in subsecond time perception are synchronized to the heart.
Zusammenfassung
The role of the heart in the experience of time has been long theorized but empirical evidence is scarce. Here, we examined the interaction between fine-grained cardiac dynamics and the momentary experience of subsecond intervals. Participants performed a temporal bisection task for brief tones (80-188 ms) synchronized with the heart. We developed a cardiac Drift-Diffusion Model (cDDM) that embedded contemporaneous heart rate dynamics into the temporal decision model. Results revealed the existence of temporal wrinkles-dilation or contraction of short intervals-in synchrony with cardiac dynamics. A lower prestimulus heart rate was associated with an initial bias in encoding the millisecond-level stimulus duration as longer, consistent with facilitation of sensory intake. Concurrently, a higher prestimulus heart rate aided more consistent and faster temporal judgments through more efficient evidence accumulation. Additionally, a higher speed of poststimulus cardiac deceleration, a bodily marker of attention, was associated with a greater accumulation of sensory temporal evidence in the cDDM. These findings suggest a unique role of cardiac dynamics in the momentary experience of time. Our cDDM framework opens a new methodological avenue for investigating the role of the heart in time perception and perceptual judgment.
Publikation
Psychophysiology
Band
60
Ausgabe
8
Seiten
e14270
Datum
2023 Aug
Zeitschriften-Abkürzung
Psychophysiology
Sprache
eng
ISSN
1469-8986 0048-5772
Rechte
© 2023 Society for Psychophysiological Research.
Extra
Place: United States PMID: 36864822
Zitierung
Sadeghi, S., Wittmann, M., De Rosa, E., & Anderson, A. K. (2023). Wrinkles in subsecond time perception are synchronized to the heart. Psychophysiology, 60(8), e14270. https://doi.org/10.1111/psyp.14270
Team