Adaptation to an Illusory Duration: Nothing Like the Real Thing?

Recent work has shown that adapting to a visual or auditory stimulus of a particular duration leads to a repulsive distortion of the perceived duration of a subsequently presented test stimulus. This distortion seems to be modality-specific and manifests itself as an expansion or contraction of perc...

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Main Authors: John Hotchkiss, Craig Aaen-Stockdale, James Heron, David Whitaker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2012-05-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1068/id244
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spelling doaj-04ce6c418781435ab6bcd3a09da594642020-11-25T02:54:29ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952012-05-01310.1068/id24410.1068_id244Adaptation to an Illusory Duration: Nothing Like the Real Thing?John HotchkissCraig Aaen-StockdaleJames HeronDavid WhitakerRecent work has shown that adapting to a visual or auditory stimulus of a particular duration leads to a repulsive distortion of the perceived duration of a subsequently presented test stimulus. This distortion seems to be modality-specific and manifests itself as an expansion or contraction of perceived duration dependent upon whether the test stimulus is longer or shorter than the adapted duration. It has been shown (Berger et al 2003, Journal of Vision 3 , 406–412) that perceived events can be as effective as actual events in inducing improvements in performance. In light of this, we investigated whether an illusory visual duration was capable of inducing a duration after-effect in a visual test stimulus that was actually no different in duration from the adaptor. Pairing a visual stimulus with a concurrent auditory stimulus of subtly longer or shorter duration expands or contracts the duration of the visual stimulus. We mapped out this effect and then chose two auditory durations (one long, one short) that produced the maximum distortion in the perceived duration of the visual stimulus. After adapting to this bimodal stimulus, our participants were asked to reproduce a visual duration. Group data showed that participants, on average, reproduced the physical duration of the visual test stimulus accurately; in other words, there was no consistent effect of adaptation to an illusory duration.https://doi.org/10.1068/id244
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John Hotchkiss
Craig Aaen-Stockdale
James Heron
David Whitaker
spellingShingle John Hotchkiss
Craig Aaen-Stockdale
James Heron
David Whitaker
Adaptation to an Illusory Duration: Nothing Like the Real Thing?
i-Perception
author_facet John Hotchkiss
Craig Aaen-Stockdale
James Heron
David Whitaker
author_sort John Hotchkiss
title Adaptation to an Illusory Duration: Nothing Like the Real Thing?
title_short Adaptation to an Illusory Duration: Nothing Like the Real Thing?
title_full Adaptation to an Illusory Duration: Nothing Like the Real Thing?
title_fullStr Adaptation to an Illusory Duration: Nothing Like the Real Thing?
title_full_unstemmed Adaptation to an Illusory Duration: Nothing Like the Real Thing?
title_sort adaptation to an illusory duration: nothing like the real thing?
publisher SAGE Publishing
series i-Perception
issn 2041-6695
publishDate 2012-05-01
description Recent work has shown that adapting to a visual or auditory stimulus of a particular duration leads to a repulsive distortion of the perceived duration of a subsequently presented test stimulus. This distortion seems to be modality-specific and manifests itself as an expansion or contraction of perceived duration dependent upon whether the test stimulus is longer or shorter than the adapted duration. It has been shown (Berger et al 2003, Journal of Vision 3 , 406–412) that perceived events can be as effective as actual events in inducing improvements in performance. In light of this, we investigated whether an illusory visual duration was capable of inducing a duration after-effect in a visual test stimulus that was actually no different in duration from the adaptor. Pairing a visual stimulus with a concurrent auditory stimulus of subtly longer or shorter duration expands or contracts the duration of the visual stimulus. We mapped out this effect and then chose two auditory durations (one long, one short) that produced the maximum distortion in the perceived duration of the visual stimulus. After adapting to this bimodal stimulus, our participants were asked to reproduce a visual duration. Group data showed that participants, on average, reproduced the physical duration of the visual test stimulus accurately; in other words, there was no consistent effect of adaptation to an illusory duration.
url https://doi.org/10.1068/id244
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