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Time Perception in Cocaine-Dependent Patients. | LitMetric

Time Perception in Cocaine-Dependent Patients.

Brain Sci

Novella Fronda Foundation, 35121 Padova, Italy.

Published: June 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The dopamine system plays a key role in how we perceive time, with disruptions in this system affecting timing in conditions like Parkinson's disease and addictions.
  • The study investigated whether chronic stimulant use impacts how individuals process time intervals by having participants complete tasks involving different stimulus durations.
  • Both stimulant-dependent patients and control participants showed similar abilities to perceive time, but patients exhibited greater variability in their responses, suggesting issues with cognitive functions rather than time processing itself.

Article Abstract

The involvement of the dopamine system in modulating time perception has been widely reported. Clinical conditions (e.g., Parkinson's disease, addictions) that alter dopaminergic signaling have been shown to affect motor timing and perceived duration. The present study aimed at investigating whether the effects of chronic stimulant use on temporal processing are time-interval dependent. All participants performed two different time bisection tasks (480/1920 ms and 1200/2640 ms) in which we analysed the proportion of long responses for each stimulus duration as well as an index of perceived duration and one of sensitivity. Regarding the proportion of long responses, we found no differences between groups in either time bisection task but patients had more variable results than controls did in both tasks. This study provides new insight into temporal processing in stimulant-dependent patients. Regardless of the time interval tested, the results showed comparable temporal ability in patients and controls, but higher temporal variability in patients. This finding is consistent with impairment of frontally-mediated cognitive functions involved in time perception rather than impairment in time processing per se.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9220971PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12060745DOI Listing

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