AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how spatial attention influences our perception of time, highlighting the relationship between spatial representations and temporal judgments.
  • Patients with right hemisphere lesions and spatial neglect displayed reduced accuracy in timing responses, particularly on the left side, indicating that neglect affects their mental time line.
  • The findings support the idea that spatial attention is essential for forming a spatial understanding of time, emphasizing its impact on how we perceive short and long durations.

Article Abstract

Objective: Time is an elusive phenomenon that is difficult to grasp with our senses. Recent work has shown how spatial representations often lie beneath temporal ones, as shown by a family of spatiotemporal congruency effects. For instance, individuals who have been exposed to left-to-right orthographic systems are better at judging short durations with their left effector and long durations with their right effector than vice versa, a phenomenon known as the spatial-temporal association of response codes (STEARC) effect. In the present neuropsychological study, we aimed to provide evidence that spatial attention mechanisms play a crucial role in generating this spatially organized mental time line.

Method: A group of 13 patients suffering from right hemisphere lesions with different degrees of spatial neglect signs and a control group of 15 age- and education-matched neurologically healthy participants were administered a unimanual version of a spatiotemporal compatibility task (STEARC task).

Results: The main results showed that the more a patient suffered from spatial neglect signs, the smaller the accuracy difference was between the left and right side responses for short durations.

Conclusions: These findings corroborate the hypothesis that the presence of disorders in spatial attention affects the left-to-right mental time line representation, especially in its leftward segment, proportionally with the amount of deficit. This study therefore suggests the critical role of spatial attention for the emergence of a spatial representation of time durations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/neu0000211DOI Listing

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