posted on 2021-01-19, 14:29authored byJason Tipples, Michael Lupton, David George
<p>How
does emotion change the way we perceive time? Studies have shown that we
overestimate the duration of faces that express anger of fear — an effect that
has been explained as due the speeding of a pacemaker that resides within an
internal clock. Here, we test the idea that attending longer to facial threat
leads to an overestimation of time. Seventy participants (16 male) estimated
the duration of angry, fearful and neutral expressions under conditions
designed to either reduce attention to time (by emphasising speedy responses) or
lengthen attention to time (by emphasising accuracy). Results were modelled
using Bayesian Multilevel Logistic Regression. The results replicate previous
findings: speed emphasis reduced temporal sensitivity and led to
both a higher overall proportion of long responses and faster reaction times. Facial
threat attenuated the drop in temporal sensitivity due to speed instructions
supporting the idea that people prolong attention to threat (even when they are
not directly instructed to do so). We relate the findings to research into
attention bias to threat and more broadly to models of perceptual decision making.</p>