Subjective duration distortions mirror neural repetition suppression.

Subjective duration is strongly influenced by repetition and novelty, such that an oddball stimulus in a stream of repeated stimuli appears to last longer in duration in comparison. We hypothesize that this duration illusion, called the temporal oddball effect, is a result of the difference in expec...

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Main Authors: Vani Pariyadath, David M Eagleman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3521010?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-6fae4d718a1a4c9b860dd5045cf7991c2020-11-24T20:52:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-01712e4936210.1371/journal.pone.0049362Subjective duration distortions mirror neural repetition suppression.Vani PariyadathDavid M EaglemanSubjective duration is strongly influenced by repetition and novelty, such that an oddball stimulus in a stream of repeated stimuli appears to last longer in duration in comparison. We hypothesize that this duration illusion, called the temporal oddball effect, is a result of the difference in expectation between the oddball and the repeated stimuli. Specifically, we conjecture that the repeated stimuli contract in duration as a result of increased predictability; these duration contractions, we suggest, result from decreased neural response amplitude with repetition, known as repetition suppression.Participants viewed trials consisting of lines presented at a particular orientation (standard stimuli) followed by a line presented at a different orientation (oddball stimulus). We found that the size of the oddball effect correlates with the number of repetitions of the standard stimulus as well as the amount of deviance from the oddball stimulus; both of these results are consistent with a repetition suppression hypothesis. Further, we find that the temporal oddball effect is sensitive to experimental context--that is, the size of the oddball effect for a particular experimental trial is influenced by the range of duration distortions seen in preceding trials.Our data suggest that the repetition-related duration contractions causing the oddball effect are a result of neural repetition suppression. More generally, subjective duration may reflect the prediction error associated with a stimulus and, consequently, the efficiency of encoding that stimulus. Additionally, we emphasize that experimental context effects need to be taken into consideration when designing duration-related tasks.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3521010?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vani Pariyadath
David M Eagleman
spellingShingle Vani Pariyadath
David M Eagleman
Subjective duration distortions mirror neural repetition suppression.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Vani Pariyadath
David M Eagleman
author_sort Vani Pariyadath
title Subjective duration distortions mirror neural repetition suppression.
title_short Subjective duration distortions mirror neural repetition suppression.
title_full Subjective duration distortions mirror neural repetition suppression.
title_fullStr Subjective duration distortions mirror neural repetition suppression.
title_full_unstemmed Subjective duration distortions mirror neural repetition suppression.
title_sort subjective duration distortions mirror neural repetition suppression.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Subjective duration is strongly influenced by repetition and novelty, such that an oddball stimulus in a stream of repeated stimuli appears to last longer in duration in comparison. We hypothesize that this duration illusion, called the temporal oddball effect, is a result of the difference in expectation between the oddball and the repeated stimuli. Specifically, we conjecture that the repeated stimuli contract in duration as a result of increased predictability; these duration contractions, we suggest, result from decreased neural response amplitude with repetition, known as repetition suppression.Participants viewed trials consisting of lines presented at a particular orientation (standard stimuli) followed by a line presented at a different orientation (oddball stimulus). We found that the size of the oddball effect correlates with the number of repetitions of the standard stimulus as well as the amount of deviance from the oddball stimulus; both of these results are consistent with a repetition suppression hypothesis. Further, we find that the temporal oddball effect is sensitive to experimental context--that is, the size of the oddball effect for a particular experimental trial is influenced by the range of duration distortions seen in preceding trials.Our data suggest that the repetition-related duration contractions causing the oddball effect are a result of neural repetition suppression. More generally, subjective duration may reflect the prediction error associated with a stimulus and, consequently, the efficiency of encoding that stimulus. Additionally, we emphasize that experimental context effects need to be taken into consideration when designing duration-related tasks.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3521010?pdf=render
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AT davidmeagleman subjectivedurationdistortionsmirrorneuralrepetitionsuppression
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