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The Recalibration Effect of Time Perception Using a Virtual Environment

Authors
Cha, Kyung-AeHong, Sung-BinWoo, Sung-HoKim, Hyun Taek
Issue Date
2012
Publisher
MIT PRESS
Citation
PRESENCE-TELEOPERATORS AND VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENTS, v.21, no.2, pp.203 - 212
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
PRESENCE-TELEOPERATORS AND VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENTS
Volume
21
Number
2
Start Page
203
End Page
212
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/106274
DOI
10.1162/PRES_a_00101
ISSN
1054-7460
Abstract
It has been demonstrated that recalibrations of audio-visual asynchrony are likely to occur in sensory processing rather than in the higher domains of cognition in the brain. The aim of the present study was to investigate recalibration of time perception to judge auditory and visual input simultaneity using a virtual environment (VE). A virtual corridor built for this experiment has depth of field, and includes six light sources (light-emitting diodes, LEDs) affixed on a computer monitor, which appear to be situated at different distances. Subjects in the VE were presented with both the flashes of LEDs and associated bursts of white noise with random stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA). Even though the auditory and visual stimuli were presented from the same distance on the display device, the subjects showed different time recalibration effects (TREs) depending on subjects' tendencies of immersion in VE. The results suggest that the differences in the TREs can be explained by subject-specific tendencies such as absorption to stimuli, which can construct subjective reality in top-down processing. Future research on neural substrates of recalibration for simultaneity will contribute toward understanding of how the brain creates the representation of spatiotemporal coherence.
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