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Advances in modern mental chronometry

[PDF] Medina_Chronometry.pdf (81.49Kb)
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10481/36977
DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00256
ISSN: 1662-5161
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Author
Medina, José M.; Wong, Willy; Díaz Navas, José Antonio; Colonius, Hans
Editorial
Frontiers Research Foundation
Materia
Mental chronometry
 
Reaction time
 
Timing and time perception
 
Sensory perception
 
Cognition
 
Human performance
 
Stochastic processes
 
Decision making
 
Date
2015
Referencia bibliográfica
Medina, J.M.; et al. Advances in modern mental chronometry. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 9: 256 (2015). [http://hdl.handle.net/10481/36977]
Abstract
Mental chronometry encompasses all aspects of time processing in the nervous system and constitutes a standard tool in many disciplines including theoretical and experimental psychology and human neuroscience. Mental chronometry has represented a fundamental approach to elucidate the time course of many cognitive phenomena and their underlying neural circuits over more than a century. Nowadays, mental chronometry continues evolving and expanding our knowledge, and our understanding of the temporal organization of the brain in combination with different neuroscience techniques and advanced methods in mathematical analysis. In research on mental chronometry, human reaction/responses times (RT) play a central role. Together with RTs, other topics in mental chronometry include vocal, manual and saccadic latencies, subjective time, psychological time, interval timing, time perception, internal clock, time production, time representation, time discrimination, time illusion, temporal summation, temporal integration, temporal judgment, redundant signals effect, perceptual, decision and motor time, etc. It is worth noting that there have been well over 37,000 full-length journal papers published in the last decade on a variety of topics related to simple and choice RTs, etc. This amounts to approximately 3800 papers per year, or roughly 10 papers per day (source: PubMed, similarly Thomson Reuters Web of Science). There are comprehensive reviews that deal extensively with the history of mental chronometry, experimental methods and paradigms, stochastic models, etc. as well as its relationship to other psychological and physiological variables, neuroscience methods and clinical applications.
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