“…The methods most commonly used are tests of time estimation (i.e., the examinee must report how long a time interval lasted), production (i.e., the examinee is told the interval length and must produce the duration in some way), and reproduction tasks (i.e., the examinee is shown a time duration and must reproduce that duration in some way), with the latter two thought to be most taxing on executive functioning resources (e.g., Barkley, Murphy, & Bush, 2001). Time misperception is evident in several clinical populations, including Parkinson’s (Pastor, Artieda, Jahanshahi, & Obeso, 1992), Huntington’s (Beste et al, 2007), and Alzheimer’s (Caselli, Iaboli, & Nichelli, 2009) diseases, but there are no well-established population differences with respect to the pattern of effects across the three types of time perception measurements.…”