A time estimation task as a possible measure of emotions: difference depending on the nature of the stimulus used

Gros, Auriane and Giroud, Maurice and Bejot, Yannick and Rouaud, Olivier and Guillemin, Sophie and Aboa Eboulé, Corine and Manera, Valeria and Daumas, Anaïs and Lemesle Martin, Martine (2015) A time estimation task as a possible measure of emotions: difference depending on the nature of the stimulus used. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 9. ISSN 1662-5153

[thumbnail of pubmed-zip/versions/3/package-entries/fnbeh-09-00143-r3/fnbeh-09-00143.pdf] Text
pubmed-zip/versions/3/package-entries/fnbeh-09-00143-r3/fnbeh-09-00143.pdf - Published Version

Download (674kB)

Abstract

Objective: Time perception is fundamental for human experience. A topic which has attracted the attention of researchers for long time is how the stimulus sensory modality (e.g., images vs. sounds) affects time judgments. However, so far, no study has directly compared the effect of two sensory modalities using emotional stimuli on time judgments.

Methods: In the present two studies, healthy participants were asked to estimate the duration of a pure sound preceded by the presentation of odors vs. emotional videos as priming stimuli (implicit emotion-eliciting task). During the task, skin conductance (SC) was measured as an index of arousal.

Results: Olfactory stimuli resulted in an increase in SC and in a constant time overestimation. Video stimuli resulted in an increase in SC (emotional arousal), which decreased linearly overtime. Critically, video stimuli resulted in an initial time underestimation, which shifted progressively towards a time overestimation. These results suggest that video stimuli recruited both arousal-related and attention-related mechanisms, and that the role played by these mechanisms changed overtime.

Conclusions: These pilot studies highlight the importance of comparing the effect of different kinds on temporal estimation tasks, and suggests that odors are well suited to investigate arousal-related temporal distortions, while videos are ideal to investigate both arousal-related and attention-related mechanisms.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Article Archives > Biological Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@articlearchives.org
Date Deposited: 06 Mar 2023 08:14
Last Modified: 17 Jul 2024 07:44
URI: http://archive.paparesearch.co.in/id/eprint/639

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item