The temporal visual oddball effect is not caused by repetition suppression

被引:3
作者
Saurels, Blake W. W. [1 ]
Yarrow, Kielan [2 ]
Lipp, Ottmar V. V. [3 ]
Arnold, Derek H. H. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Queensland, Sch Psychol, St Lucia, Australia
[2] City Univ London, Dept Psychol, London, England
[3] Queensland Univ Technol, Sch Psychol & Counselling, Brisbane, Australia
关键词
Oddball; Perceived duration; Repetition suppression; Prediction; Anticipation; TIME PERCEPTION; ATTENTION; DURATION;
D O I
10.3758/s13414-023-02730-4
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The oddball paradigm is commonly used to investigate human time perception. Trains of identical repeated events ('standards') are presented, only to be interrupted by a different 'oddball' that seems to have a relatively protracted duration. One theoretical account has been that this effect is driven by repetition suppression for repeated standards. The idea is that repeated events seem shorter as they incur a progressively reduced neural response, which is supported by the finding that oddball perceived duration increases linearly with the number of preceding repeated standards. However, typical oddball paradigms confound the probability of oddball presentations with variable numbers of standard repetitions on each trial, allowing people to increasingly anticipate an oddball presentation as more standards are presented. We eliminated this by making participants aware of what fixed number of standards they would encounter before a final test input and tested different numbers of standards in separate experimental sessions. The final event of sequences, the test event, was equally likely to be an oddball or another repeat. We found a positive linear relationship between the number of preceding repeated standards and the perceived duration of oddball test events. However, we also found this for repeat tests events, which speaks against the repetition suppression account of the temporal oddball effect.
引用
收藏
页码:1755 / 1760
页数:6
相关论文
共 24 条
[11]  
Kleiner M, 2007, PERCEPTION, V36, P14
[12]   Time Perception: The Surprising Effects of Surprising Stimuli [J].
Matthews, William J. .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-GENERAL, 2015, 144 (01) :172-197
[13]   SUSTAINED AND TRANSIENT COMPONENTS OF FOCAL VISUAL-ATTENTION [J].
NAKAYAMA, K ;
MACKEBEN, M .
VISION RESEARCH, 1989, 29 (11) :1631-1647
[14]   The Effect of Predictability on Subjective Duration [J].
Pariyadath, Vani ;
Eagleman, David .
PLOS ONE, 2007, 2 (11)
[15]   Subjective Duration Distortions Mirror Neural Repetition Suppression [J].
Pariyadath, Vani ;
Eagleman, David M. .
PLOS ONE, 2012, 7 (12)
[16]   The effect of attention and working memory on the estimation of elapsed time [J].
Polti, Ignacio ;
Martin, Benoit ;
van Wassenhove, Virginie .
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2018, 8
[17]   Predictive coding in the visual cortex: a functional interpretation of some extra-classical receptive-field effects [J].
Rao, RPN ;
Ballard, DH .
NATURE NEUROSCIENCE, 1999, 2 (01) :79-87
[18]   DURATION ILLUSIONS IN A TRAIN OF VISUAL-STIMULI [J].
ROSE, D ;
SUMMERS, J .
PERCEPTION, 1995, 24 (10) :1177-1187
[19]   Neural prediction errors depend on how an expectation was formed [J].
Saurels, Blake W. ;
Frommelt, Tonya ;
Yarrow, Kielan ;
Lipp, Ottmar, V ;
Arnold, Derek H. .
CORTEX, 2022, 147 :102-111
[20]   Predictable events elicit less visual and temporal information uptake in an oddball paradigm [J].
Saurels, Blake W. ;
Lipp, Ottmar, V ;
Yarrow, Kielan ;
Arnold, Derek H. .
ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS, 2020, 82 (03) :1074-1087