Prospective and retrospective judgments of time as a function of amount of information processed

scientific article published on December 1, 1976

Prospective and retrospective judgments of time as a function of amount of information processed is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P698PubMed publication ID1020767

P2093author name stringM. Kinsbourne
G. W. Miller
R. E. Hicks
P433issue4
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P921main subjecttime perceptionQ185961
cognitionQ2200417
P304page(s)719-730
P577publication date1976-12-01
P1433published inAmerican Journal of PsychologyQ4744269
P1476titleProspective and retrospective judgments of time as a function of amount of information processed
P478volume89

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q55645788A role for memory in prospective timing informs timing in prospective memory.
Q52065037Accuracy of temporal coding: auditory-visual comparisons.
Q41127600Against the View that Consciousness and Attention are Fully Dissociable
Q33533359An ecological approach to prospective and retrospective timing of long durations: a study involving gamers
Q30432210Attention and working memory: two basic mechanisms for constructing temporal experiences
Q26779547Attentional Mechanisms during the Performance of a Subsecond Timing Task
Q43182869Choice in a self-control paradigm: Quantification of experience-based differences.
Q50103942Consciousness: a unique way of processing information
Q72397278Contrasting task demands alter the perceived duration of brief time intervals
Q72376955Controlled attention sharing influences time estimation
Q48254738Dissociation between time reproduction of actions and of intervals in patients with Parkinson's disease
Q52095439Duration judgment and the experience of change.
Q51901590Effect of tactile stimulus frequency on time perception: the role of working memory.
Q74013546Effects of attention manipulation on judgments of duration and of intensity in the visual modality
Q30537898Effects of event structure on retrospective duration judgments
Q33870771Engaging narratives evoke similar neural activity and lead to similar time perception.
Q30537840Expected endings and judged duration
Q38497085Interval estimation: effect of processing demands on prospective and retrospective reports
Q35620791Interval timing deficits assessed by time reproduction dual tasks as cognitive endophenotypes for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
Q37592376Neural pattern change during encoding of a narrative predicts retrospective duration estimates.
Q51198326On symbolic temporal information: beliefs about the experience of duration.
Q52034947Order information in short-term memory and time estimation.
Q26851481Perceiving the passage of time: neural possibilities
Q37844496Prospective and retrospective duration judgments: A meta-analytic review
Q27004115Prospective and retrospective duration memory in the hippocampus: is time in the foreground or background?
Q34479581Recovery of time estimation following moderate to severe traumatic brain injury
Q72729003Relative and absolute duration judgments under prospective and retrospective paradigms
Q37201151Relative time sharing: new findings and an extension of the resource allocation model of temporal processing.
Q38396831Sequential effects in time perception
Q34162878Sex differences in duration judgments: a meta-analytic review
Q51919036Skill training, retention, and transfer: the effects of a concurrent secondary task.
Q37173815Studies on time: a proposal on how to get out of circularity
Q35465739Temporal decision making in simultaneous timing
Q52054200Temporal interval production and processing in working memory.
Q50608054Temporal memory of emotional experience.
Q36587002The Influence of Odors on Time Perception
Q33951924The ecological validity of delay aversion and response inhibition as measures of impulsivity in AD/HD: a supplement to the NIMH multimodal treatment study of AD/HD.
Q55035318The effect of attention and working memory on the estimation of elapsed time.
Q52066384The effects of physical work, mental work, and quantity on children's time perception.
Q52077706The effects of quantity, complexity, and attentional demand on children's time perception.
Q55346823The explicit judgment of long durations of several minutes in everyday life: Conscious retrospective memory judgment and the role of affects?
Q42362865The faster internal clock in ADHD is related to lower processing speed: WISC-IV profile analyses and time estimation tasks facilitate the distinction between real ADHD and pseudo-ADHD
Q35636771The impact of attention on judgments of frequency and duration
Q71152884The influence of task difficulty and external tempo on subjective time estimation
Q38459038The relationship between the number of presented stimuli and prospective duration estimates: The effect of concurrent task activity
Q52026723The role of segmentation in prospective and retrospective time estimation processes.
Q64114500Time Perception of an Artwork's Manipulation Is Distorted by Patients With Parkinson's Disease
Q52062510Time estimation and concurrent nontemporal processing: specific interference from short-term-memory demands.
Q52128645Time estimation as an index of processing demand in memory search.
Q51191247Time estimation of depressive patients: the influence of interval content.
Q52089440Time perception and attention: the effects of prospective versus retrospective paradigms and task demands on perceived duration.
Q36722201Timing and executive function: bidirectional interference between concurrent temporal production and randomization tasks
Q42841475Timing in the absence of clocks: encoding time in neural network states

Search more.