Artículos de revistas
STATIC IMAGES WITH DIFFERENT INDUCED INTENSITIES OF HUMAN BODY MOVEMENTS AFFECT SUBJECTIVE TIME
Fecha
2011Registro en:
PERCEPTUAL AND MOTOR SKILLS, v.113, n.1, p.157-170, 2011
0031-5125
10.2466/24.25.27.PMS.113.4.157-170
Autor
NATHER, Francisco Carlos
BUENO, Jose Lino Oliveira
Institución
Resumen
Modulation of subjective time was examined using static images eliciting perceptions of different intensities of body movement. Undergraduate students were exposed to photographs of dancer sculptures in different dance positions for 36 sec. and asked to estimate the exposure duration. Lower movement intensities were related to shorter estimated durations. Mean durations for images of unmoving dancers were underestimated and for dancers taking a ballet step were overestimated. Temporal estimations were also related to the order of presentation of the stimuli, which suggested that subjective time estimations were influenced by the experimental context. Subjective time is related not only to the visual perception of moving images, but also of elicited perceptions of movement in static images, suggesting an embodiment effect on subjective time estimation.