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Personne :
Grondin, Simon

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Grondin

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Simon

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Université Laval. École de psychologie

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ncf10143544

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Voici les éléments 1 - 3 sur 3
  • PublicationRestreint
    About the time-shrinking illusion in the tactile modality
    (Elsevier, 2013-07-25) Grondin, Simon; Hasuo, Emi; Kuroda, Tsuyoshi
    The aim of this study was to examine the occurrence of a so-called time-shrinking illusion in the tactile modality, while it had been tested so far mainly with auditory and visual stimuli. We examined whether the perception of an empty time interval marked by two brief tactile stimuli, S (240 ms), would be influenced by the presence of a preceding time interval, P (160, 240, or 320 ms). Results showed that S was underestimated when P was shorter than S. This underestimation appeared as a kind of perceptual assimilation between P and S, but S was not overestimated when P was longer. The underestimation was rather interpreted as a manifestation of the time-shrinking illusion.
  • PublicationRestreint
    The occurrence of the filled duration illusion: A comparison of the method of adjustment with the method of magnitude estimation
    (Elsevier, 2013-11-05) Grondin, Simon; Nakajima, Yoshitaka; Hasuo, Emi; Tomimatsu, Erika; Ueda, Kazuo
    A time interval between the onset and the offset of a continuous sound (filled interval) is often perceived to be longer than a time interval between two successive brief sounds (empty interval) of the same physical duration. The present study examined whether and how this phenomenon, sometimes called the filled duration illusion (FDI), occurs for short time intervals (40-520 ms). The investigation was conducted with the method of adjustment (Experiment 1) and the method of magnitude estimation (Experiment 2). When the method of adjustment was used, the FDI did not appear for the majority of the participants, but it appeared clearly for some participants. In the latter case, the amount of the FDI increased as the interval duration lengthened. The FDI was more likely to occur with magnitude estimation than with the method of adjustment. The participants who showed clear FDI with one method did not necessarily show such clear FDI with the other method.
  • PublicationRestreint
    Discrimination of two neighboring intra- and intermodal empty time intervals marked by three successive stimuli
    (Elsevier, 2013-12-21) Grondin, Simon; Hasuo, Emi; Labonté, Katherine; Laflamme, Vincent; Kuroda, Tsuyoshi
    We investigated the discrimination of two neighboring intra- or inter-modal empty time intervals marked by three successive stimuli. Each of the three markers was a flash (visual—V) or a sound (auditory—A). The first and last markers were of the same modality, while the second one was either A or V, resulting in four conditions: VVV, VAV, AVA and AAA. Participants judged whether the second interval, whose duration was systematically varied, was shorter or longer than the 500-ms first interval. Compared with VVV and AAA, discrimination was impaired with VAV, but not so much with AVA (in Experiment 1). Whereas VAV and AVA consisted of the same set of single intermodal intervals (VA and AV), discrimination was impaired in the VAV compared to the AVA condition. This difference between VAV and AVA could not be attributed to the participants' strategy to perform the discrimination task, e.g., ignoring the standard interval or replacing the visual stimuli with sounds in their mind (in Experiment 2). These results are discussed in terms of sequential grouping according to sensory similarity.