Temporal Accumulation and Decision Processes in the Duration Bisection Task Revealed by Contingent Negative Variation

The duration bisection paradigm is a classic task used to examine how humans and other animals perceive time. Typically, participants first learn short and long anchor durations and are subsequently asked to classify probe durations as closer to the short or long anchor duration. However, the specif...

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Main Authors: Kwun Kei eNg, Simon eTobin, Trevor B Penney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2011-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience
Subjects:
EEG
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnint.2011.00077/full
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spelling doaj-ea515f8474c0496db085dc06b9ab15cf2020-11-24T23:29:27ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience1662-51452011-11-01510.3389/fnint.2011.0007713704Temporal Accumulation and Decision Processes in the Duration Bisection Task Revealed by Contingent Negative VariationKwun Kei eNg0Simon eTobin1Trevor B Penney2National University of SingaporeUniversité LavalNational University of SingaporeThe duration bisection paradigm is a classic task used to examine how humans and other animals perceive time. Typically, participants first learn short and long anchor durations and are subsequently asked to classify probe durations as closer to the short or long anchor duration. However, the specific representations of time and the decision rules applied in this task remain the subject of debate. For example, researchers have questioned whether participants actually use representations of the short and long anchor durations in the decision process rather than merely a response threshold that is derived from those anchor durations. Electroencephalographic (EEG) measures, like the Contingent Negative Variation (CNV), can provide information about the perceptual and cognitive processes that occur between the onset of the timing stimulus and the motor response. The CNV has been implicated as an electrophysiological marker of interval timing processes such as temporal accumulation, representation of the target duration, and the decision that the target duration has been attained. Hence, we used the CNV to investigate which durations are involved in the bisection categorization decision. The CNV increased in amplitude up to the value of the short anchor, remained at a constant level until about the geometric mean of the short and long anchors, when it began to resolve. These results suggest that the short anchor and the geometric mean of the short and long anchors are critical target durations used in the bisection categorization decision process. In addition, larger mean N1-P2 amplitude differences were associated with larger amplitude CNVs, which may reflect how precisely a participant is able to initiate timing on each trial across a test session. Overall, the results demonstrate the value of using scalp-recorded EEG to address basic questions about interval timing.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnint.2011.00077/fullContingent Negative VariationTime PerceptionEEGinterval timingDuration bisectionN1-P2
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kwun Kei eNg
Simon eTobin
Trevor B Penney
spellingShingle Kwun Kei eNg
Simon eTobin
Trevor B Penney
Temporal Accumulation and Decision Processes in the Duration Bisection Task Revealed by Contingent Negative Variation
Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience
Contingent Negative Variation
Time Perception
EEG
interval timing
Duration bisection
N1-P2
author_facet Kwun Kei eNg
Simon eTobin
Trevor B Penney
author_sort Kwun Kei eNg
title Temporal Accumulation and Decision Processes in the Duration Bisection Task Revealed by Contingent Negative Variation
title_short Temporal Accumulation and Decision Processes in the Duration Bisection Task Revealed by Contingent Negative Variation
title_full Temporal Accumulation and Decision Processes in the Duration Bisection Task Revealed by Contingent Negative Variation
title_fullStr Temporal Accumulation and Decision Processes in the Duration Bisection Task Revealed by Contingent Negative Variation
title_full_unstemmed Temporal Accumulation and Decision Processes in the Duration Bisection Task Revealed by Contingent Negative Variation
title_sort temporal accumulation and decision processes in the duration bisection task revealed by contingent negative variation
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience
issn 1662-5145
publishDate 2011-11-01
description The duration bisection paradigm is a classic task used to examine how humans and other animals perceive time. Typically, participants first learn short and long anchor durations and are subsequently asked to classify probe durations as closer to the short or long anchor duration. However, the specific representations of time and the decision rules applied in this task remain the subject of debate. For example, researchers have questioned whether participants actually use representations of the short and long anchor durations in the decision process rather than merely a response threshold that is derived from those anchor durations. Electroencephalographic (EEG) measures, like the Contingent Negative Variation (CNV), can provide information about the perceptual and cognitive processes that occur between the onset of the timing stimulus and the motor response. The CNV has been implicated as an electrophysiological marker of interval timing processes such as temporal accumulation, representation of the target duration, and the decision that the target duration has been attained. Hence, we used the CNV to investigate which durations are involved in the bisection categorization decision. The CNV increased in amplitude up to the value of the short anchor, remained at a constant level until about the geometric mean of the short and long anchors, when it began to resolve. These results suggest that the short anchor and the geometric mean of the short and long anchors are critical target durations used in the bisection categorization decision process. In addition, larger mean N1-P2 amplitude differences were associated with larger amplitude CNVs, which may reflect how precisely a participant is able to initiate timing on each trial across a test session. Overall, the results demonstrate the value of using scalp-recorded EEG to address basic questions about interval timing.
topic Contingent Negative Variation
Time Perception
EEG
interval timing
Duration bisection
N1-P2
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnint.2011.00077/full
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AT simonetobin temporalaccumulationanddecisionprocessesinthedurationbisectiontaskrevealedbycontingentnegativevariation
AT trevorbpenney temporalaccumulationanddecisionprocessesinthedurationbisectiontaskrevealedbycontingentnegativevariation
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