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Time will tell: Sluggish Cognitive Tempo, attention and timing functioning in adults

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University of Groningen

Time will tell

Müller, Kathi

DOI:

10.33612/diss.171005987

IMPORTANT NOTE: You are advised to consult the publisher's version (publisher's PDF) if you wish to cite from it. Please check the document version below.

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Publication date: 2021

Link to publication in University of Groningen/UMCG research database

Citation for published version (APA):

Müller, K. (2021). Time will tell: Sluggish Cognitive Tempo, attention and timing functioning in adults. https://doi.org/10.33612/diss.171005987

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1. Millisecond timing, which is involved in speech, motor control and the perception of music is not associated with the personality trade Impulsivity (chapter 2).

2. Millisecond timing is unrelated to the individual’s subjective time perspective (chapter 2). 3. Though Sluggish Cognitive Tempo can be measured in a psychometrically valid way, its clinical merit remains questionable (chapter 3).

4. Subjectively reported signs of Sluggish Cognitive Tempo are associated with subjectively experienced deficits in attention and everyday timing behavior (chapter 4)

5. Sluggish Cognitive Tempo does not affect basic cognitive functioning but might be a condition that impacts on higher order cognitive functions, such as individual reflective processes (chapter 5). 6. The temporal limitation of our existence cannot be outwitted by acceleration. The time we try to gain by optimizing processes will in the end prove to be a shortage (General observation).

7. In every moment, we decide on what our past will look like, not our future (General idea).

8. The poem “Hans Guck-in-die-Luft” shows that Sluggish Cognitive Tempo was already present in the mid-19th century (poem by Heinrich Hoffmann) (General idea).

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