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Larger stimuli are judged to last longer.

Larger stimuli are judged to last longer. Research Abstract Details 

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  • Larger stimuli are judged to last longer. Abstract Text:

    bin xuanBin Xuan,daren zhangDaren Zhang,sheng heSheng He,xiangchuan chenXiangchuan Chen,bin xuanBin Xuan,daren zhangDaren Zhang,sheng heSheng He,xiangchuan chenXiangchuan Chen,

    Representing magnitude information in various dimensions, including space, quantity, and time, is an important function of the human brain. Many previous studies reported that numerical and spatial magnitudes could be mutually influenced through a "mental number line". In this study, we address the question of whether magnitudes in nontemporal dimensions and magnitudes in time are represented independently or not. Observers judged the duration of the stimuli while four types of nontemporal magnitude information, including number of dots, size of open squares, luminance of solid squares, and numeric value of digits, were manipulated in Stroop-like paradigms. Results revealed that stimuli with larger magnitudes in these nontemporal dimensions were judged to be temporally longer. This observation supports the idea that magnitudes in temporal and nontemporal dimensions are not independent and implies the existence of generalized and abstract components in the magnitude representations.

    Larger stimuli are judged to last longer. Publishing Authors By Initials

    b xuanB Xuan,d zhangD Zhang,s heS He,x chenX Chen,b xuanB Xuan,d zhangD Zhang,s heS He,x chenX Chen,

    For similar abstracts research abstracts see: abstracts research

    PUBMED ID PMID:

    MEDLINE DATE:

    Larger stimuli are judged to last longer. Journal Published:

    PUBLICATION TYPE: Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov

    Journal: Journal of vision

    VOLUME: 7

    Page Numbers: 2.1-5

    Journal Abbreviation:

    ISSN: 1534-7362

    DAY: 6

    MONTH: 07

    YEAR: 2007

    Larger stimuli are judged to last longer. Information

    Number of References:

    LANGUAGE: eng

    NlmUniqueID: 101147197

    Larger stimuli are judged to last longer. Keywords Mesh Terms:

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    Grant and Affiliation Information for Larger stimuli are judged to last longer.

    AFFILIATION: Hefei National Laboratory for Physical Sciences at Microscale and School of Life Science, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, Anhui, China. xbin@mail.ustc.edu.cn

    Country: United States

    United States Research PublicationUnited States Research Publication

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    MEDLINETA: J Vis

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