4.6 Article

Effect of glare illusion-induced perceptual brightness on temporal perception

期刊

PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY
卷 58, 期 9, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/psyp.13851

关键词

glare illusion; perceptual magnitude; pupil diameter; pupillary light reflex; pupillometry; temporal perception

资金

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [17H06292, 20H04273]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [20H04273, 17H06292] Funding Source: KAKEN

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This study found that temporal perception is influenced by illusory brightness, with apparently brighter stimuli leading to a shorter perceived duration. Even when the physical luminance of stimuli was adjusted to match the illusory-induced magnitude, this temporal modulation did not occur. The results suggest that temporal processing depends on a combination of external and perceived subjective magnitude, with illusory brightness affecting the sense of duration.
Temporal perception and the ability to precisely ascertain time duration are central to essentially all behaviors. Since stimulus magnitude is assumed to be positively related to the perceived duration from the early days of experimental psychology, most studies so far have assessed this effect by presenting stimuli with relatively different intensities in physical quantity. However, it remains unclear how perceptual magnitude itself directly affects temporal perception. In this study (n = 21, n = 20), we conducted a two-interval duration-discrimination task adapting a glare illusion (a visual illusion that enhances perceived brightness without changing physical luminance) to investigate whether the temporal perception is also influenced by perceptual magnitude. Based on the mean difference in the point of subjective equality derived from a psychometric function and pupil diameter, we found that temporal perception is influenced by the illusory brightness of glare stimuli. Interestingly, the perceived duration of the apparently brighter stimuli (glare stimuli; larger pupillary light reflex) was shorter than that of control stimuli (halo stimuli; smaller pupillary light reflex) despite the stimuli remaining physically equiluminant, in contrast with the well-known magnitude effect. Furthermore, this temporal modulation did not occur when the physical luminance of the stimuli was manipulated to match the illusory-induced magnitude. These results indicate that temporal processing depends on the confluence of both external and perceived subjective magnitude and even illusory brightness is sufficient to affect the sense of duration; which may be explained by the internal magnitude decrease of the glare stimuli due to pupillary constriction decreasing the light entering the eye.

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