There is increasing evidence that the brain possesses mechanisms to integrate incoming sensory information as it unfolds over time-periods of 2-3 seconds. The ubiquity of this mechanism across modalities, tasks, perception and production has led to the proposal that it may underlie our experience of the subjective present. A critical test of this claim is that this phenomenon should be apparent in naturalistic visual experiences. We tested this using movie-clips as a surrogate for our day-to-day experience, temporally scrambling them to require (re-) integration within and beyond the hypothesized 2-3 second interval. Two independent experiments demonstrate a step-wise increase in the difficulty to follow stimuli at the hypothesized 2-3 second scrambling condition. Moreover, only this difference could not be accounted for by low-level visual properties. This provides the first evidence that this 2-3 second integration window extends to complex, naturalistic visual sequences more consistent with our experience of the subjective present.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4092072 | PMC |
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Commun Biol
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Graduate School of Biomedical Engineering, UNSW, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia; Tyree Foundation Institute of Health Engineering (IHealthE), UNSW, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia. Electronic address:
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Department of Psychology, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, United States.
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Centre for Psychedelic Research, Department of Brain Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
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