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  1. Dedicated and intrinsic models of time perception.Richard B. Ivry & John E. Schlerf - 2008 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 12 (7):273-280.
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  • Factorial comparison of working memory models.Ronald van den Berg, Edward Awh & Wei Ji Ma - 2014 - Psychological Review 121 (1):124-149.
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  • Scalar expectancy theory and Weber's law in animal timing.John Gibbon - 1977 - Psychological Review 84 (3):279-325.
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  • Events are perceivable but time is not.James J. Gibson - 1975 - In J. T. Fraser & Nathaniel M. Lawrence (eds.), The Study of Time II: Proceedings of the Second Conference of the International Society for the Study of Time Lake Yamanaka-Japan. Springer Verlag. pp. 295-301.
    For centuries psychologists have been trying to explain how a man or an animal could perceive space. They have thought of space as having three dimensions and the difficulty was how an observer could see the third dimension. For depth, as Bishop Berkeley asserted at the outset of the New Theory of Vision (1709), “is a line endwise to the eye which projects only one point in the fund of the eye.” Space was its dimensions. It was empty save for (...)
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  • Effects of Temporal Features and Order on the Apparent duration of a Visual Stimulus.Aurelio Bruno, Inci Ayhan & Alan Johnston - 2012 - Frontiers in Psychology 3.
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