Capacity limit of simultaneous temporal processing: how many concurrent 'clocks' in vision?

A fundamental ability for humans is to monitor and process multiple temporal events that occur at different spatial locations simultaneously. A great number of studies have demonstrated simultaneous temporal processing (STP) in human and animal participants, i.e., multiple 'clocks' rather...

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Main Authors: Xiaorong Cheng, Qi Yang, Yaqian Han, Xianfeng Ding, Zhao Fan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3954791?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-fd2c7eaf48684a198c517f5eea7c10f22020-11-25T02:37:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0193e9179710.1371/journal.pone.0091797Capacity limit of simultaneous temporal processing: how many concurrent 'clocks' in vision?Xiaorong ChengQi YangYaqian HanXianfeng DingZhao FanA fundamental ability for humans is to monitor and process multiple temporal events that occur at different spatial locations simultaneously. A great number of studies have demonstrated simultaneous temporal processing (STP) in human and animal participants, i.e., multiple 'clocks' rather than a single 'clock'. However, to date, we still have no knowledge about the exact limitation of the STP in vision. Here we provide the first experimental measurement to this critical parameter in human vision by using two novel and complementary paradigms. The first paradigm combines merits of a temporal oddball-detection task and a capacity measurement widely used in the studies of visual working memory to quantify the capacity of STP (CSTP). The second paradigm uses a two-interval temporal comparison task with various encoded spatial locations involved in the standard temporal intervals to rule out an alternative, 'object individuation'-based, account of CSTP, which is measured by the first paradigm. Our results of both paradigms indicate consistently that the capacity limit of simultaneous temporal processing in vision is around 3 to 4 spatial locations. Moreover, the binding of the 'local clock' and its specific location is undermined by bottom-up competition of spatial attention, indicating that the time-space binding is resource-consuming. Our finding that the capacity of STP is not constrained by the capacity of visual working memory (VWM) supports the idea that the representations of STP are likely stored and operated in units different from those of VWM. A second paradigm confirms further that the limited number of location-bound 'local clocks' are activated and maintained during a time window of several hundreds milliseconds.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3954791?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xiaorong Cheng
Qi Yang
Yaqian Han
Xianfeng Ding
Zhao Fan
spellingShingle Xiaorong Cheng
Qi Yang
Yaqian Han
Xianfeng Ding
Zhao Fan
Capacity limit of simultaneous temporal processing: how many concurrent 'clocks' in vision?
PLoS ONE
author_facet Xiaorong Cheng
Qi Yang
Yaqian Han
Xianfeng Ding
Zhao Fan
author_sort Xiaorong Cheng
title Capacity limit of simultaneous temporal processing: how many concurrent 'clocks' in vision?
title_short Capacity limit of simultaneous temporal processing: how many concurrent 'clocks' in vision?
title_full Capacity limit of simultaneous temporal processing: how many concurrent 'clocks' in vision?
title_fullStr Capacity limit of simultaneous temporal processing: how many concurrent 'clocks' in vision?
title_full_unstemmed Capacity limit of simultaneous temporal processing: how many concurrent 'clocks' in vision?
title_sort capacity limit of simultaneous temporal processing: how many concurrent 'clocks' in vision?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description A fundamental ability for humans is to monitor and process multiple temporal events that occur at different spatial locations simultaneously. A great number of studies have demonstrated simultaneous temporal processing (STP) in human and animal participants, i.e., multiple 'clocks' rather than a single 'clock'. However, to date, we still have no knowledge about the exact limitation of the STP in vision. Here we provide the first experimental measurement to this critical parameter in human vision by using two novel and complementary paradigms. The first paradigm combines merits of a temporal oddball-detection task and a capacity measurement widely used in the studies of visual working memory to quantify the capacity of STP (CSTP). The second paradigm uses a two-interval temporal comparison task with various encoded spatial locations involved in the standard temporal intervals to rule out an alternative, 'object individuation'-based, account of CSTP, which is measured by the first paradigm. Our results of both paradigms indicate consistently that the capacity limit of simultaneous temporal processing in vision is around 3 to 4 spatial locations. Moreover, the binding of the 'local clock' and its specific location is undermined by bottom-up competition of spatial attention, indicating that the time-space binding is resource-consuming. Our finding that the capacity of STP is not constrained by the capacity of visual working memory (VWM) supports the idea that the representations of STP are likely stored and operated in units different from those of VWM. A second paradigm confirms further that the limited number of location-bound 'local clocks' are activated and maintained during a time window of several hundreds milliseconds.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3954791?pdf=render
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