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Temporal Recalibration: Does Awareness Influence How We Perceive Time?

After exposure to a short, constant delay between voluntary movement and sensory
stimuli, temporal recalibration (TR) arises to realign asynchronous stimuli. The objective of this
study was to determine if awareness of the temporal lag between a motor response (i.e., a
keypress) and a sensory event (i.e., a visual flash) is necessary for TR to occur. We further
investigated whether manipulating the motor and judgment tasks required modifies the influence
of awareness on TR due to the cognitive processes engaged. Participants (n = 22) were randomly
divided between two groups (Group 1: Aware and Group 2: Unaware). The Aware group was
told of the temporal lag between their keypress and visual flash at the beginning of the
experiment, whereas the Unaware group was not. All participants completed 8 blocks of trials, in
which the motor tasks (e.g., a single or repetitive tap), judgment tasks (e.g., judging the order of
the keypress in relation to the visual flash or judging whether the two stimuli were simultaneous
or not), and temporal lag between keypress and visual flash (e.g., a 0 ms or 100 ms lag) varied.
TR was determined by comparing judgments between corresponding blocks of trials in which the
temporal lag was 0 ms to 100 ms. Results revealed that both the Aware and Unaware groups of
participants demonstrated TR across both motor and judgment tasks, and that the magnitude of
TR did not vary across Aware and Unaware participants or tasks. Thus, results of the present
study revealed that awareness of a temporal lag does not influence the magnitude of motor-sensory
TR achieved.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:uottawa.ca/oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/41950
Date31 March 2021
CreatorsBubna, Mikaela
ContributorsCressman, Erin
PublisherUniversité d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
Source SetsUniversité d’Ottawa
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Formatapplication/pdf

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