Monica GoriMaria Bianca AmadeoAndrea EscelsiorGiuseppe EspositoAlberto InuggiRiccardo GuglielmoLuis PolenaJuxhin BodeBeatriz Pereira da SilvaMario AmoreGianluca Serafini
Our perception of the world and sense of self are deeply influenced by our perception of time. Research in psychiatric disorders has shown altered temporal perception across a variety of tasks, though the mechanisms behind these changes remain unclear. This study aims to explore temporal processing in patients with bipolar disorder (BD) and schizophrenia (SZ) by examining auditory, visual, and audio-visual temporal perception. The results revealed impaired temporal performance across all sensory modalities and the absence of auditory dominance in both patient groups. Specifically, in SZ patients, multisensory processing was associated with visual precision, while in BD patients, there was no such relationship with either visual or auditory precision. Notably, in SZ, visual precision was significantly linked to negative symptoms. Moreover, despite the lack of auditory dominance and similar deficits in unisensory performance, neither patient group benefited from redundant multisensory information in the temporal task. These findings highlight distinct patterns of temporal processing in BD and SZ compared to healthy controls, suggesting potential pathways for targeted interventions, such as integrating sensory training into clinical rehabilitative frameworks.
Marcela Valdés‐TovarAlejandra Monserrat Rodríguez‐RamírezLeslye Rodríguez-CárdenasCarlo Esteban Sotelo-RamírezBeatríz CamarenaMarco Antonio Sanabrais‐JiménezHéctor Solís‐ChagoyánJesús ArguetaGermán Octavio López-Riquelme
Eric A. ReavisJunghee LeeJonathan K. WynnKatherine L. NarrStephanie NjauStephen A. EngelMichael F. Green
Yuji WadaNorimichi KitagawaKaoru Noguchi
Elvan ÇiftçiHeysem KayaHüseyin GüleçAlbert Ali Salah
Michael‐Paul SchallmoScott R. SponheimCheryl A. Olman