Title of article :
The relationship between diurnal type and time duration estimation at morning and evening times of day
Author/Authors :
Myers، Paul M. نويسنده , , Tilley، Andrew نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
This study investigates whether different diurnal types (morning versus evening) differ in their estimation of time duration at different times of the day. Given that the performance of morning and evening types is typically best at their preferred times of day, and assuming different diurnal trends in subjective alertness (arousal?) for morning and evening types, and adopting the attentional gate model of time duration estimation, it was predicted that morning types would tend to underestimate and be more accurate in the morning compared to evening types where the opposite pattern was expected. Nineteen morning types, 18 evening types and 18 intermediate types were drawn from a large sample (N=1175) of undergraduates administered the Early/Late Preference Scale. Groups performed a time duration estimation task using the production method for estimating 20-s unfilled intervals at two times of day: 0800/1830. The median absolute error, median directional error and frequency of under- and overestimation were analysed using repeated-measures ANOVA. While all differences were statistically nonsignificant, the following trends were observed: morning types performed better than evening types; participants overestimated in the morning and underestimated in the evening; and participants were more accurate later in the day. It was concluded that the trends are inconsistent with a relationship between subjective alertness and time duration estimation but consistent with a possible relationship between time duration estimation and diurnal body temperature fluctuations.
Keywords :
Time duration estimation , circadian rhythm , Time of day , Diurnal type , Chronopsychology
Journal title :
Personality and Individual Differences
Journal title :
Personality and Individual Differences