Clinical Study

Psychomotor Functions and Interval Timing in Patients Receiving Intravenous Anesthesia for Endoscopic Procedures: The Pilot Study

Table 3

duration judgment ratio (DJR) of the auditory stimuli.

Initial assessment1.5 h3 h6 h

Anesthesia Group’s DJR (three consecutive trials), 𝑛 = 2 3
1 s1.07; 1.03; 1.071.11; 1.20; 1.151.05; 1.09; 1.201.01; 1.09; 1.14
2 s0.95; 0.91; 1.011.07; 1.09; 1.041.01; 1.04; 1.071.12; 1.11; 1.17
5 s0.90; 0.85; 0.860.96; 0.92; 0.870.95; 0.94; 0.980.98; 0.99; 0.98
7 s0.83; 0.89; 0.910.87; 0.96; 0.940.94; 0.92; 0.950.95; 0.99; 1.00

Control Group’s DJR (three consecutive trials), 𝑛 = 1 7
1 s1.19; 1.03; 1.001.21; 1.07; 1.281.24; 1.05; 1.191.13; 1.08; 1.12
2 s0.96; 0.97; 1.001.06; 0.95; 1.071.00; 1.05; 1.051.00; 1.02; 1.02
5 s0.81; 0.85; 0.850.90; 0.96; 0.960.96; 0.95; 0.970.93; 0.98; 0.97
7 s0.91; 0.89; 0.870.93; 0.95; 0.971.02; 0.94; 0.960.96; 0.96; 0.99

Duration judgment ratio (DJR)—the duration that is experienced is divided by duration of the stimuli that are presented.