AI Article Synopsis

  • Dementia affects how individuals perceive time, but it’s unclear how this differs from normal aging, prompting a review to explore existing studies on time perception among different dementia types and healthy individuals.
  • The review included 12 studies and found that people with dementia generally perceive time differently than those without, with some variances noted between different types of dementia.
  • It highlights the need for more research beyond just comparing dementia to non-dementia conditions, aiming to improve well-being through dementia-friendly initiatives that account for these differences in time perception.

Article Abstract

Dementia often manifests with profound alterations in perception, but it is unclear if and to what extent time perception is altered among people living with dementia compared to those experiencing normal aging. Thus, this scoping review aimed to answer the following research questions: (1) What study designs, participants, time intervals, paradigms, tests, and scores have been employed and in which countries were these methods employed to study time perception in dementia? (2) In which ways do time perception differ across individuals living with and without dementia? (3) In which ways do time perception differ across individuals living with different types of dementia? After deduplication, title and abstract screening, and full-text review, a total of 12 studies were included in this scoping review. Findings generally indicated that people living with dementia perceive time differently than people living without dementia, and that some differences across dementia diagnoses may exist, but the body of literature on time perception in dementia was quite limited. Future research should focus on replicating findings while extending the research to look beyond the dementia versus non-dementia dichotomy as differences across dementia diagnoses may exist. Moreover, if people living with dementia (and, in particular, living with different dementia diagnoses) experience time differently from those experiencing normal aging, we need to begin to address these differences in dementia-friendly initiatives to improve well-being for this population.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/14713012241257299DOI Listing

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