An exercise in time perception Matt Danzico

Transcriber: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Jessica Ruby

Hello, humans.

My name is Matt

and for the next several moments,

you are going to listen to me.

Mwah, ha, ha, ha, ha.

Sorry. I’m just joking.

This is my normal voice.

Have you ever taken direction

from a mysterious voice on the computer before?

No? Perfect!

I want to try an experiment with you,

but I can’t tell you what that experiment entails

because if I do,

it won’t work.

You’ll just have to trust me.

This will all make sense soon,

hopefully.

If you’re sitting down,

stand up from your chair and take a step back.

In a moment, I’m going to have you twirl around,

so give yourself a bit of space.

Need to move some furniture around?

Take your time.

I’ll wait.

On the count of three,

you’re going to start hopping on one foot.

Are you ready?

One,

two,

three!

Hop,

hop,

hop,

hop,

hop.

Nice work!

OK, while you’re still hopping,

I now want you to begin barking like a dog.

Ruff, ruff;

ruff, ruff;

ruff, ruff.

Wow, that’s quite a bark!

And a few more.

Ruff, ruff, ruff.

And three,

two,

one,

stop!

Feel free to relax and sit back down.

Now, I want you think about how much time passed

between the moment I said, “Go!”

and you began hopping on one foot

to the moment I said, “Stop!”

Take a guess.

I’m looking for an exact number of seconds or minutes.

Now, with a pen and paper, write that number down.

All done?

The exact time was actually 26 seconds.

Did you overestimate?

Chances are that you did.

So, what was the culprit?

The culprit was time perception.

Although we can make shockingly precise time estimates,

when we experience something new, unusual, or dynamic,

like hopping on one foot

while taking instructions from a voice on the computer,

or, say, jumping out of an airplane,

we often miscalculate how much time has passed.

Meaning, if you bungee jump for the first time,

your fall to the bottom may seem like it lasted for 10 seconds

while the recorded time may actually show

that the jump only lasted for 5.

The reason for this difference is

unlike your body’s physical drop to the bottom,

your brain’s perception of time does not follow

a straight line between two points.

Some scientists even believe

your brain follows more of a curved path

that is dependent on the amount of information

you take in as you fall downwards.

For example, David Eagleman,

a neuroscientist at Baylor College of Medicine,

believes time perception is heavily influenced

by the number of memories and data

you record onto your brain.

When you have a new experience,

like jumping off a high dive for the first time,

your senses are heightened.

You’re taking in more details

about sights, sounds, and smells

than you normally would.

And you store more data onto your brain

in the form of memories.

So, the more data you store in your brain,

like the smell of chlorine as you leapt from the high dive

or the color of the water,

the longer your perception of that experience.

Meaning, the number of memories

and data you record on your brain

has a direct impact on how long

you believe that experience to have lasted.

Have you ever heard a person recount

what it’s like to be in a car accident?

Although automotive accidents typically last seconds,

those involved often say they felt

the accident lasted far longer.

Time perception can also account for

why your childhood may have seem to have lasted forever.

By adulthood, a year can slip by in a heartbeat,

but children record more data onto their brains.

This occurs because many of the experiences

we have as children are new and unfamiliar to us.

The stack of encoded memories on your brain

is so dense that reading them back makes you believe

your experiences must have taken forever.

Additionally, when you’re 5 years old,

one year is 1/5 of your life.

But, when you’re 25, one year makes up 1/25,

further altering your perception of time.

And, if you’re an adult,

think about a trip that you may have taken

to a far-away land for the first time.

Didn’t those two weeks you spent exploring your surroundings

seem to have lasted far longer than 14 days?

Though time perception is rooted

in both hard science and theory,

it provides a great lesson for us

on how to live our lives.

I’m sure you have all heard

that a person shouldn’t sit on a couch

and let life pass them by.

Well, time perception tells us why that is.

If you get up and engage with the world

and have new experiences,

and maybe even hop around on one foot

and bark like a dog,

you will literally perceive your own life

to have lasted for a longer period of time.

抄写员:Andrea McDonough
审稿人:Jessica Ruby

你好,人类。

我的名字是马特

,在接下来的几分钟里,

你会听我的。

呜呜呜哈哈哈哈

对不起。 我只是在开玩笑。

这是我正常的声音。

你以前有没有听过

电脑上的神秘声音?

不? 完美的!

我想和你一起做一个实验,

但我不能告诉你这个实验需要什么,

因为如果我这样做了,

它就行不通了。

你只需要相信我。 希望

这一切很快就会变得有意义

如果您正在坐下,

请从椅子上站起来并后退一步。

一会儿,我会让你转圈,

所以给自己一点空间。

需要移动一些家具?

慢慢来。

我会等待。

数到三,

你就会开始单脚跳跃。

你准备好了吗?

一二三!

跳,

跳,

跳,

跳,

跳。

干得好!

好的,当你还在跳的时候,

我现在想让你开始像狗一样吠叫。

拉夫,拉夫;

拉夫,拉夫;

拉夫,拉夫。

哇,这真是一个树皮!

还有一些。

拉,拉,拉。

三,

二,

一,

停下!

随意放松并坐下来。

现在,我想让你想想

从我说“走!”之间经过了多少时间。

当我说“停!”时,你开始单脚跳跃。

猜一下。

我正在寻找确切的秒数或分钟数。

现在,用笔和纸,写下这个数字。

全做完了?

准确的时间实际上是 26 秒。

你高估了吗?

很有可能你做到了。

那么,罪魁祸首是什么?

罪魁祸首是时间观念。

虽然我们可以做出令人震惊的精确时间估计,

但当我们体验到一些新的、不寻常的或动态的事情时,

比如

在接受计算机上的声音指令时单脚

跳跃,或者说,从飞机上跳下来,

我们经常会错误地估计多少时间 时间过去了。

意思是,如果你是第一次蹦极,

你的跌落到底部可能看起来持续了 10 秒,

而记录的时间实际上可能

显示跳跃只持续了 5 秒

。造成这种差异的原因

与你身体的物理跌落不同 归根结底,

你的大脑对时间的感知并不是

两点之间的一条直线。

一些科学家甚至认为,

你的大脑会遵循更多的弯曲路径

,这取决于

你跌倒时接收到的信息量。

例如,

贝勒医学院的神经科学家大卫伊格曼

认为,时间感知在很大程度上

受到你记录到大脑中的记忆和数据数量的影响

当您有新的体验时,

例如第一次跳下高空跳水,

您的感官就会得到提升。

你比平时更

了解视觉、声音和气味的细节

你以记忆的形式将更多的数据存储到你的大脑

中。

因此,您在大脑中存储的数据越多,

例如从高处跳下时的氯气气味

或水的颜色

,您对这种体验的感知就越长。

这意味着,

您在大脑中记录的记忆和数据的数量

直接影响

您认为这种体验持续了多长时间。

你有没有听过一个人讲述

发生车祸的感觉?

虽然汽车事故通常会持续几秒钟,

但相关人员经常表示,他们

认为事故持续的时间要长得多。

时间感知也可以解释

为什么你的童年似乎永远持续下去。

到成年后,一年的时间会在心跳中溜走,

但孩子们会在他们的大脑中记录更多的数据。

发生这种情况是因为我们小时候的许多经历对

我们来说都是新的和不熟悉的。

你大脑上的编码记忆堆栈

如此密集,以至于读回它们会让你相信

你的经历一定会永远消失。

此外,当您 5 岁时,

一年是您生命的 1/5。

但是,当你 25 岁时,一年占 1/25,

进一步改变了你对时间的看法。

而且,如果你是成年人,

想想你可能

第一次去遥远的地方旅行。

你探索周围环境的那两个星期

似乎持续了远远超过 14 天吗?

虽然时间感知植根

于硬科学和理论,

但它为我们提供了如何生活的重要课程

我相信你们都听

说过一个人不应该坐在沙发

上让生活过去。

好吧,时间感知告诉我们为什么会这样。

如果你站起来与世界接触

并获得新的体验,

甚至可能单脚

跳来跳去,像狗一样吠叫,

你会真正感觉到自己的

生命已经持续了更长的时间。