The categorical use of a continuous time representation

被引:0
|
作者
Alessia Beracci
Julio Santiago
Marco Fabbri
机构
[1] University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli,Department of Psychology
[2] University of Granada,Department of Experimental Psychology
来源
Psychological Research | 2022年 / 86卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The abstract concept of time is mentally represented as a spatially oriented line, with the past associated with the left space and the future associated with the right. Although the line is supposed to be continuous, most available evidence is also consistent with a categorical representation that only discriminates between past and future. The aim of the present study was to test the continuous or categorical nature of the mental timeline. Italian participants judged the temporal reference of 20 temporal expressions by pressing keys on either the left or the right. In Experiment 1 (N = 32), all words were presented at the center of the screen. In Experiment 2 (N = 32), each word was presented on the screen in a central, left, or right position. In Experiment 3 (N = 32), all text was mirror-reversed. In all experiments, participants were asked to place the 20 temporal expressions on a 10-cm line. The results showed a clear Spatial–TEmporal Association of Response Codes (STEARC) effect which did not vary in strength depending on the location of the temporal expressions on the line. However, there was also a clear Distance effect: latencies were slower for words that were closer to the present than further away. We conclude that the mental timeline is a continuous representation that can be used in a categorical way when an explicit past vs. future discrimination is required by the task.
引用
收藏
页码:1015 / 1028
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The categorical use of a continuous time representation
    Beracci, Alessia
    Santiago, Julio
    Fabbri, Marco
    PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH-PSYCHOLOGISCHE FORSCHUNG, 2022, 86 (04): : 1015 - 1028
  • [2] Unsupervised Categorical Representation Learning for Package Arrival Time Prediction
    Li, Yang
    Wu, Xingyu
    Wang, Jinglong
    Liu, Yong
    Wang, Xiaoqing
    Deng, Yuming
    Miao, Chunyan
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 30TH ACM INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INFORMATION & KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT, CIKM 2021, 2021, : 3935 - 3944
  • [3] Categorical representation of superschemes
    Wakabayashi, Yasuhiro
    PURE AND APPLIED MATHEMATICS QUARTERLY, 2020, 16 (05) : 1659 - 1696
  • [4] Representation of continuous change with discrete time
    Barber, F
    Moreno, S
    FOURTH INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON TEMPORAL REPRESENTATION AND REASONING, PROCEEDINGS, 1997, : 175 - 179
  • [5] DISCRETE TIME REPRESENTATION OF CONTINUOUS TIME ARMA PROCESSES
    Chambers, Marcus J.
    Thornton, Michael A.
    ECONOMETRIC THEORY, 2012, 28 (01) : 219 - 238
  • [6] Continuous, categorical, and time to event cocaine use outcome variables: degree of intercorrelation and sensitivity to treatment group differences
    McKay, JR
    Alterman, AI
    Koppenhaver, JM
    Mulvaney, FD
    Bovasso, GB
    Ward, K
    DRUG AND ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE, 2001, 62 (01) : 19 - 30
  • [7] Visual processing of image statistics: Continuous vs. categorical representation of local statistics
    Conte, MM
    Victor, JD
    INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE, 2002, 43 : U821 - U821
  • [8] ASYMMETRIES IN THE REPRESENTATION OF CATEGORICAL PHONOTACTICS
    Gallagher, Gillian
    LANGUAGE, 2016, 92 (03) : 557 - 590
  • [9] The representation and matching of categorical shape
    Shokoufandeh, All
    Bretzner, Lars
    Macrini, Diego
    Demirci, M. Fatih
    Jonsson, Clas
    Dickinson, Sven
    COMPUTER VISION AND IMAGE UNDERSTANDING, 2006, 103 (02) : 139 - 154
  • [10] Time-frequency analysis of continuous and categorical sinewave speech perception
    Simpson, M. I. G.
    Witton, C.
    Barnes, G. R.
    Fisher, A. E.
    Furlong, P. L.
    Desai, R. H.
    Liebenthal, E.
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2006, 20 (04) : 333 - 333