Altered temporal awareness during Covid-19 pandemic.

Altered temporal awareness during Covid-19 pandemic.

Publication date: Jul 22, 2024

Social isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic had profound effects on human well-being. A handful of studies have focused on how time perception was altered during the COVID-19 pandemic, while no study has tested whether temporal metacognition is also affected by the lockdown. We examined the impact of long-term social isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic on the ability to monitor errors in timing performance. We recruited 1232 participants from 12 countries during lockdown, 211 of which were retested “post-pandemic” for within-group comparisons. We also tested a new group of 331 participants during the “post-pandemic” period and compared their data to those of 1232 participants tested during the lockdown (between-group comparison). Participants produced a 3600 ms target interval and assessed the magnitude and direction of their time production error. Both within and between-group comparisons showed reduced metric error monitoring performance during the lockdown, even after controlling for government-imposed stringency indices. A higher level of reported social isolation also predicted reduced temporal error monitoring ability. Participants produced longer duration during lockdown compared to post-lockdown (again controlling for government stringency indices). We reason that these effects may be underlain by altered biological and behavioral rhythms during social isolation experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic. Understanding these effects is crucial for a more complete characterization of the cognitive consequences of long-term social isolation.

Concepts Keywords
Covid Ability
Lockdown Altered
Long Covid
Metacognition Error
Pandemic Group
Isolation
Lockdown
Long
Pandemic
Participants
Post
Social
Temporal
Term
Tested

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Covid-19 pandemic
disease VO time
disease IDO production

Original Article

(Visited 2 times, 1 visits today)