Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Time is Confidence: Monetary Incentives Metacognitive Profile on Duration Judgment Cover

Time is Confidence: Monetary Incentives Metacognitive Profile on Duration Judgment

Open Access
|Jan 2025

Abstract

The question we addressed in the current study is whether the mere prospect of monetary reward gain affects subjective time perception. To test this question, we collected trial-based confidence reports in a task where participants made categorical decisions about probe durations relative to the reference duration. When there was a potential to gain a monetary reward, the duration was perceived to be longer than in the neutral condition. Confidence, which reflects the perceived probability of being correct, was higher in the reward gain condition than in the neutral condition. We found that confidence influences the sense of time in different participants. Participants with high confidence reported perceiving the duration signaled by the monetary gain condition longer than participants with low confidence. Our results showed that only high confidence individuals overestimated the context of monetary gain. Finally, we found a negative relationship between confidence and time perception, and that confidence bias at the maximum uncertainty duration of 450 ms is predictive of time perception. Taken together, the current study demonstrates that subjective measures of the confidence profile caused an overestimation of time rather than the outcome valence of reward expectancy.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/joc.414 | Journal eISSN: 2514-4820
Language: English
Submitted on: Mar 13, 2024
|
Accepted on: Oct 28, 2024
|
Published on: Jan 6, 2025
Published by: Ubiquity Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2025 Mitra Taghizadeh Sarabi, Eckart Zimmermann, published by Ubiquity Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.