Audrey-Anne Gagnon-Harvey’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Figure 1. Mean composite scores for temporal impression as a function of age group and sex. A higher score indicates a higher impression that time passes rapidly. Bars represent the standard error of the means.
Sociodemographic characteristics of the sample (n = 894).
Mean scores for each variable according to age groups.
Mean scores on each temporal item and differences between age groups.
Age, Personal Characteristics, and the Speed of Psychological Time
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January 2021

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8 Citations

Timing & Time Perception

Audrey-Anne Gagnon-Harvey

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Jamie McArthur

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Adults often report the impression that time seems to pass more and more quickly as they get older. The purpose of this study is to identify how individual characteristics relate to this impression of acceleration. To do so, 894 participants aged 15 to 97 completed a questionnaire that surveyed sociodemographic characteristics, impulsivity, anxiety, personality, and relation to time. They also indicated how fast different lapses of time seemed to have passed: yesterday, the past week, the past month, the past year, the past three years, the past five years, and the past 10 years. For each period, except for one year, adolescents found that time passes more slowly than participants from older groups (18–29 years, 30–59 years, and 60 years and over). A composite score for all these periods also indicates that female participants found that time passes more rapidly than males. However, a multiple linear regression analysis reveals that the variables that best predict the impression that time passes faster as we get older are high anxiety, the belief in the phenomenon of temporal compression, as well as conscientiousness and agreeableness personality traits, with other factors explaining little variance. These results add further weight to the impression that time seems to pass more quickly as we age, but also indicate that other variables than age play a critical role in explaining this impression.

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Citations (1)


... periment group and analyzed correlations between relative changes in time perception and user experience with the RSTC. This approach not only addresses the challenge of linking physical time accuracy with user experience but also mitigates the effects of factors such as age and gender [61,21], strengthening the persuasiveness of our findings. Before the formal experiment, we conducted a full-factorial pilot study with 12 participants. ...

Reference:

Zeitgebers-Based User Time Perception Analysis and Data-Driven Modeling via Transformer in VR
Age, Personal Characteristics, and the Speed of Psychological Time

Timing & Time Perception