posted on 2020-06-18, 13:15authored byEzgi Özoğlu, Roland Thomaschke
<p>Human
timing and interoception are closely coupled. Thus, temporal illusions like,
for example, emotion-induced time dilation, are profoundly affected by
interoceptive processes. Emotion-induced time dilation refers to the effect
when emotion, especially in the arousal dimension, leads to the systematic
overestimation of intervals. The close relation to interoception became evident
in previous studies which showed increased time dilation when participants
focused on interoceptive signals. In the present study we show that individuals
with particularly high interoceptive accuracy are able to shield their timing
functions to some degree from interference by arousal. Participants performed a
temporal bisection task with low-arousal and high-arousal stimuli, and
subsequently reported their interoceptive accuracy via a questionnaire. A
substantial arousal-induced time dilation effect was observed, which was
negatively correlated with participants' interoceptive accuracy. Our findings
support a pivotal role of interoception in temporal illusions, and are
discussed in relation to neuropsychological accounts of interoception.</p>