The duration of a brief event in the mind's eye.

A new illusion of perceived duration associated with focused spatial attention is reported. Brief flashes in attended locations were perceived to last longer than the same flashes in unattended locations. That illusion was shown to be completely independent of another illusion concerning the perceived onset of a flash, ruling out the possibility that the effect on perceived duration is derivative of a comparison between perceived onset and offset. The illusion also occurred when the event duration was composed of a temporal gap rather than a brief flash, ruling out low-level visible persistence as a basis for the illusion. Taken together, the results point to cortical connections from higher brain centers' both speeding and prolonging the visual signals occurring in lower sensory regions. Those temporal consequences could easily subserve many of the perceptual benefits ascribed to attention for spatial and intensive properties.

[1]  Marshall M. Haith,et al.  The speed of visual processing in children and adults: Effects of backward and forward masking , 1970 .

[2]  Stanley Coren,et al.  Sensation and perception , 1979 .

[3]  Richards,et al.  Visual Attentional Orienting in Developing Hockey Players , 1997, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[4]  L. Stelmach,et al.  Directed attention and perception of temporal order. , 1991, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[5]  W. Bischof,et al.  On the relation between metacontrast masking and suppression of visible persistence. , 1990, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[6]  M. Cheal,et al.  Attention Effects on Form Discrimination at Different Eccentricities , 1989, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.

[7]  E. Averbach,et al.  Short-term memory in vision , 1961 .

[8]  M. Posner,et al.  Orienting of Attention* , 1980, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology.

[9]  Stanley Coren,et al.  Seeing is Deceiving , 2020 .

[10]  H. Ridley Eye and Brain , 1973 .

[11]  V. Lollo,et al.  Beyond the attentional blink: visual masking by object substitution. , 1998, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[12]  Mitsuo Ikeda,et al.  Temporal impulse response , 1986, Vision Research.

[13]  M. Coltheart,et al.  Iconic memory and visible persistence , 1980, Perception & psychophysics.

[14]  Paul E. Downing,et al.  The line-motion illusion : attention or impletion? , 1997 .

[15]  L. Stelmach,et al.  Attentional modulation of visual processes in motion perception. , 1994 .

[16]  D. Zakay Time Estimation Methods—Do They Influence Prospective Duration Estimates? , 1993, Perception.

[17]  G. Loftus,et al.  Sensory and cognitive components of visual information acquisition. , 1994, Psychological review.

[18]  Nikos K Logothetis,et al.  The color-opponent and broad-band channels of the primate visual system , 1990, Trends in Neurosciences.

[19]  S. Zeki A vision of the brain , 1993 .

[20]  F. Macar,et al.  Controlled attention sharing influences time estimation , 1994, Memory & cognition.

[21]  Ewart A. C. Thomas,et al.  Cognitive processing and time perception , 1975 .

[22]  R. Ulrich,et al.  Directed attention prolongs the perceived duration of a brief stimulus , 1998, Perception & psychophysics.

[23]  J. Enns,et al.  Covert visual orienting across the lifespan. , 1997, Canadian journal of experimental psychology = Revue canadienne de psychologie experimentale.

[24]  C. J. Downing Expectancy and visual-spatial attention: effects on perceptual quality. , 1988, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[25]  V. Lollo,et al.  Suppression of visible persistence as a function of spatial separation between inducing stimuli , 1987, Perception & psychophysics.

[26]  V. S. Ramachandran,et al.  Visual attention modulates metacontrast masking , 1995, Nature.

[27]  V. Lollo Temporal integration in visual memory. , 1980 .

[28]  Bruno G. Breitmeyer,et al.  Visual masking : an integrative approach , 1984 .

[29]  W. James,et al.  The Principles of Psychology. , 1983 .

[30]  Howard S. Bashinski,et al.  Enhancement of perceptual sensitivity as the result of selectively attending to spatial locations , 1980, Perception & psychophysics.

[31]  Ernst Mach,et al.  The analysis of sensations and the relation of the physical to the psychical , 1914, The Mathematical Gazette.

[32]  Yehoshua Tsal,et al.  Towards a resolution theory of visual attention. , 1995 .

[33]  M. Posner,et al.  Images of mind , 1994 .

[34]  J. Duncan The locus of interference in the perception of simultaneous stimuli. , 1980 .

[35]  James T. Enns,et al.  Visual masking plays two roles in the attentional blink , 1999, Perception & psychophysics.

[36]  C. Bundesen A theory of visual attention. , 1990, Psychological review.

[37]  T. Spencer,et al.  Evidence for an interruption theory of backward masking. , 1970, Journal of experimental psychology.

[38]  M. T. Reinitz,et al.  Effects of spatially directed attention on visual encoding , 1990, Perception & psychophysics.

[39]  C. Eriksen,et al.  Visual attention within and around the field of focal attention: A zoom lens model , 1986, Perception & psychophysics.

[40]  J. Enns,et al.  Object Substitution: A New Form of Masking in Unattended Visual Locations , 1997 .

[41]  V. Lollo,et al.  Equating the brightness of brief visual stimuli of unequal durations , 1986 .