TY - JOUR T1 - Temporal context actively shapes EEG signatures of time perception JF - The Journal of Neuroscience JO - J. Neurosci. DO - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0628-20.2021 SP - JN-RM-0628-20 AU - Atser Damsma AU - Nadine Schlichting AU - Hedderik van Rijn Y1 - 2021/04/08 UR - http://www.jneurosci.org/content/early/2021/04/06/JNEUROSCI.0628-20.2021.abstract N2 - Our subjective perception of time is optimized to temporal regularities in the environment. This is illustrated by the central tendency effect: when estimating a range of intervals, short intervals are overestimated whereas long intervals are underestimated to reduce the overall estimation error. Most models of interval timing ascribe this effect to the weighting of the current interval with previous memory traces after the interval has been perceived. Alternatively, the perception of the duration could already be flexibly tuned to its temporal context. We investigated this hypothesis using an interval reproduction task in which human participants (both sexes) reproduced a shorter and longer interval range. As expected, reproductions were biased towards the subjective mean of each presented range. EEG analyses showed that temporal context indeed affected neural dynamics during the perception phase. Specifically, longer previous durations decreased CNV and P2 amplitude and increased beta power. In addition, multivariate pattern analysis showed that it is possible to decode context from the transient EEG signal quickly after both onset and offset of the perception phase. Together, these results suggest that temporal context creates dynamic expectations which actively affect the perception of duration.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTThe subjective sense of duration does not arise in isolation, but is informed by previous experiences. This is demonstrated by abundant evidence showing that the production of duration estimates is biased towards previously experienced time intervals. However, it is yet unknown whether this temporal context actively affects perception or only asserts its influence in later, post-perceptual stages as proposed by most current formal models of this task. Using an interval reproduction task, we show that EEG signatures flexibly adapt to the temporal context during perceptual encoding. Furthermore, interval history can be decoded from the transient EEG signal even when the current duration was identical. Thus, our results demonstrate that context actively influences perception. ER -