Previous studies have shown that discrimination sensitivity in 2AFC tasks depends on the presentation order of the standard and comparison stimulus. The present study examined whether this so-called Type B effect generalizes across different standard magnitudes. Therefore, Experiment 1 employed an auditory duration discrimination task with short (100 ms) and long (1,000 ms) standard durations and a constant interstimulus interval (ISI) of 1,000 ms. For both standard durations, a clear Type B effect emerged. In Experiment 2, discrimination sensitivity was assessed for short (300 ms) and long (1,000 ms) ISIs and a constant standard duration of 100 ms, in order to examine whether the Type B effect diminishes or even reverses when both stimuli are presented in rapid succession, as was suggested by previous studies. In the short, but not the long ISI condition, the Type B effect was virtually eliminated. Taken together, the present experiments suggest that the Type B effect is robust across standard magnitude, but diminishes when the time interval between both stimuli is reduced. This result pattern is discussed within the framework of the Internal Reference Model and the Sensation Weighting Model. It is also demonstrated that both models provide a quantitative account of the present results. In typical psychophysical tasks such as the two-alternative forced-choice (2AFC) task, participants are asked to discriminate between a fixed-magnitude standard stimulus s and a variable comparison stimulus c, whose magnitude can be lower, equal to or higher than the magnitude of the standard. In the temporal 2AFC task, these two stimuli are presented successively in one of two temporal orders, that is, sc and cs , to balance for potential effects of stimulus order on task performance. Researchers often disregard such order effects by aggregating data across stimulus order. However, if the observed data are analyzed separately for the two stimulus orders, order effects are commonly observed. For example, the order-conditional psychophysical functions observed in a typical 2AFC task might be shifted horizontally from the point of objective equality (i.e., a Type A order effect or time-order error), such that the magnitude of the first stimulus is either judged to be higher or lower than the magnitude of the second one. Theoretically, this might be the sign of a perceptual, decisional, or response bias, and has been extensively studied (cf. Eisler, Eisler, & Hellström, 2008). More important for the purpose of the present study, however, is the so-called Type B order effect (Ulrich 2010;Ulrich & Vorberg, 2009). This effect refers to the phenomenon that the spread of the order-conditional psychometric functions may differ with regard to stimulus order. Specifically, the difference limen (DL) is typically larger and thus discrimination sensitivity