Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4346403 | Neuroscience Letters | 2010 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Analyses of neural mechanisms of duration processing are essential for the understanding of psychological phenomena which evolve in time. Different mechanisms are presumably responsible for the processing of shorter (below 500Â ms) and longer (above 500Â ms) events but have not yet been a subject of an investigation with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). In the present study, we show a greater involvement of several brain regions - including right-hemispheric midline structures and left-hemispheric lateral regions - in the processing of visual stimuli of shorter as compared to longer duration. We propose a greater involvement of lower-level cognitive mechanisms in the processing of shorter events as opposed to higher-level mechanisms of cognitive control involved in longer events.
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Authors
Evgeny Gutyrchik, Jan Churan, Thomas Meindl, Arun Lawrence Warren Bokde, Henriette von Bernewitz, Christine Born, Maximilian Reiser, Ernst Pöppel, Marc Wittmann,