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Warren Meck (17 November 1956 – 21 January 2020)[1] was a professor in psychology and neuroscience american at Duke University. His main field of interest was Interval-Timing mechanisms and subjective time perception.[2] He was editor in chief in the journal of Timing & Time Perception.[3] He introduced an interesting time perception model in 1984 and 2005.[4] He explained that time is created in a dedicated module in the certain internal clock.[5] Meck has over 19,000 citations in Google Scholar.[6]
Meck, W. H., & Church, R. M. (1983). A mode control model of counting and timing processes. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes, 9(3), 320.
Meck, W. H. (1996). Neuropharmacology of timing and time perception. Cognitive brain research, 3(3), 227–242.
Gibbon, J., Church, R. M., & Meck, W. H. (1984). Scalar timing in memory. Annals of the New York Academy of sciences, 423(1), 52–77.
Buhusi, Catalin V., and Warren H. Meck. "What makes us tick? Functional and neural mechanisms of interval timing." Nature Reviews Neuroscience 6.10 (2005): 755–765.
Meck, Warren H. "Selective adjustment of the speed of internal clock and memory processes." Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes 9.2 (1983): 171.
Yin, B., & Meck, W. H. (2014). Comparison of interval timing behaviour in mice following dorsal or ventral hippocampal lesions with mice having δ-opioid receptor gene deletion. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences, 369(1637), 20120466.
Coull, J. T., Cheng, R. K., & Meck, W. H. (2011). Neuroanatomical and neurochemical substrates of timing. Neuropsychopharmacology, 36(1), 3-25.