The Perception of Time
Why Time Seems to Slow Down in Emergencies
By Charles Q. Choi, special to LiveScience.com
(my new favorite website, but I can't find a direct link to the article, so I reprinted the whole thing)
In The Matrix, the hero Neo could dodge bullets because time moved in slow motion for him during battles. Indeed, in the real world, people in danger often feel as if time slowed down for them.
This warping of time apparently does not result from the brain speeding up from adrenaline when in danger. Instead, this feeling seems to be an illusion, scientists now find.
To see if danger makes people experience time in slow motion, scientists at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston tried scaring volunteers. However, roller coasters and other frightening amusement park rides did not cause enough fear to make time warp.
Instead, the researchers dropped volunteers from great heights. Scientists had volunteers dive backward with no ropes attached, into a special net that helped break their fall. They reached 70 mph during the roughly three-second, 150-foot drop.
"It's the scariest thing I have ever done," said researcher David Eagleman, a neuroscientist at Baylor College of Medicine. "I knew it was perfectly safe, and I also knew that it would be the perfect way to make people feel as though an event took much longer than it actually did."
Indeed, volunteers estimated their own fall lasted about a third longer than dives they saw other volunteers take.
To see if this meant people in danger could actually see and perceive more — like a video camera in slow motion can — Eagleman and his colleagues developed a device called a "perceptual chronometer" that was strapped onto volunteers' wrists. This watch-like device flickered numbers on its screen. The scientists could adjust the speed at which numbers appeared until they were too fast to see.
If the brain sped up when in danger, the researchers theorized numbers on the perceptual chronometers would appear slow enough to read while volunteers fell. Instead, the scientists found that volunteers could not read the numbers at faster-than-normal speeds.
"We discovered that people are not like Neo in The Matrix, dodging bullets in slow-mo," Eagleman said.
Instead, such time warping seems to be a trick played by one's memory. When a person is scared, a brain area called the amygdala becomes more active, laying down an extra set of memories that go along with those normally taken care of by other parts of the brain.
"In this way, frightening events are associated with richer and denser memories," Eagleman explained. "And the more memory you have of an event, the longer you believe it took."
Eagleman added this illusion "is related to the phenomenon that time seems to speed up as you grow older. When you're a child, you lay down rich memories for all your experiences; when you're older, you've seen it all before and lay down fewer memories. Therefore, when a child looks back at the end of a summer, it seems to have lasted forever; adults think it zoomed by."
This work could help better understand disorders linked with timing, such as schizophrenia. Still, in the end, "it's really about understanding the virtual reality machinery that we're trapped in," Eagleman told LiveScience. "Our brain constructs this reality for us that, if we look closely, we can find all these strange illusions in. The fact that we're now seeing this with how we perceive time is new."
h/t QKShooter
By Charles Q. Choi, special to LiveScience.com
(my new favorite website, but I can't find a direct link to the article, so I reprinted the whole thing)
In The Matrix, the hero Neo could dodge bullets because time moved in slow motion for him during battles. Indeed, in the real world, people in danger often feel as if time slowed down for them.
This warping of time apparently does not result from the brain speeding up from adrenaline when in danger. Instead, this feeling seems to be an illusion, scientists now find.
To see if danger makes people experience time in slow motion, scientists at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston tried scaring volunteers. However, roller coasters and other frightening amusement park rides did not cause enough fear to make time warp.
Instead, the researchers dropped volunteers from great heights. Scientists had volunteers dive backward with no ropes attached, into a special net that helped break their fall. They reached 70 mph during the roughly three-second, 150-foot drop.
"It's the scariest thing I have ever done," said researcher David Eagleman, a neuroscientist at Baylor College of Medicine. "I knew it was perfectly safe, and I also knew that it would be the perfect way to make people feel as though an event took much longer than it actually did."
Indeed, volunteers estimated their own fall lasted about a third longer than dives they saw other volunteers take.
To see if this meant people in danger could actually see and perceive more — like a video camera in slow motion can — Eagleman and his colleagues developed a device called a "perceptual chronometer" that was strapped onto volunteers' wrists. This watch-like device flickered numbers on its screen. The scientists could adjust the speed at which numbers appeared until they were too fast to see.
If the brain sped up when in danger, the researchers theorized numbers on the perceptual chronometers would appear slow enough to read while volunteers fell. Instead, the scientists found that volunteers could not read the numbers at faster-than-normal speeds.
"We discovered that people are not like Neo in The Matrix, dodging bullets in slow-mo," Eagleman said.
Instead, such time warping seems to be a trick played by one's memory. When a person is scared, a brain area called the amygdala becomes more active, laying down an extra set of memories that go along with those normally taken care of by other parts of the brain.
"In this way, frightening events are associated with richer and denser memories," Eagleman explained. "And the more memory you have of an event, the longer you believe it took."
Eagleman added this illusion "is related to the phenomenon that time seems to speed up as you grow older. When you're a child, you lay down rich memories for all your experiences; when you're older, you've seen it all before and lay down fewer memories. Therefore, when a child looks back at the end of a summer, it seems to have lasted forever; adults think it zoomed by."
This work could help better understand disorders linked with timing, such as schizophrenia. Still, in the end, "it's really about understanding the virtual reality machinery that we're trapped in," Eagleman told LiveScience. "Our brain constructs this reality for us that, if we look closely, we can find all these strange illusions in. The fact that we're now seeing this with how we perceive time is new."
h/t QKShooter
Labels: general interest, getting old, perception, time



12 Comments:
great read. I loved it.
Also along similar lines of percieved reality. Depressed people perceive their reality in a much different way than they do when they aren't depressed. They just don't know it at the time of depression. And that altered reality causes them to act in ways that sabatage the healing process.
This is why I feel mental illness should be equally on par with other medical illness in terms of insurance coverage and treatment.
Very interesting read scalpel! I have experienced that during times of fear but I also think during times of EXTREME stress which maybe is fear after all.
Also interesting...the concept of one's life flashing before them when death seems immanent although that didn't happen to me.
I agree with HH.
Years ago when we did marital counseling our insurance only covered 50% for marriage counseling. It seems to me that if people could afford to get the mental health they need that it might help alleviate stress, etc, thereby heading off more serious medical illnesses that WILL cause the ins companies more money in the end.
"In this way, frightening events are associated with richer and denser memories,"
This seems like a cruel trick of some sort. The richer denser memories are the ones that come back first and hang around longest.
I also agree with HH.
I wonder if that's why I have such vivid memories of kissing my first girlfriend. I was scared out of my gourd.
The lifescience.com site is way cool, also. Adding that one to my links page. Thanks!
Interesting research study on this:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/12/071211233934.htm
Hmmm . . . Very interesting experiment they did. I think about this a lot and I even wrote a short story about it: http://forgingironman.blogspot.com/2007/09/life-isnt-fair.html
"In this way, frightening events are associated with richer and denser memories," Eagleman explained. "And the more memory you have of an event, the longer you believe it took."
Maybe thats why the migraineurs thought it took 3 hours to be seen in the ER.
This happened when my dog trotted out into traffic as a car came passing by. I remember watching helplessly as if suspended in time. I don't remember being able to do anything but watch until he came almost parallel to the car and got clipped by the front? rear? fender. Only then did the spell seem to break. I screamed his name and swept him up in my arms and ran back to the truck, deposited him on the front seat and took him to the vet. Fortunately he didn't actually get run over but he still had a broken bleeding leg. He just sat there panting, gingerly resting his leg and looking at me with a big grin as if to say, oh boy! Road trip!
"the researchers dropped volunteers from great heights"
I wonder how long it took to get IRB approval for this study
No kidding about IRB approval. If I have to wait two weeks to find out if I can change a sentence on a consent form, I can only imagine...
The intensity of affect associated with traumatic (in the psych, not just the ED, sense) experiences is also what causes these memories to be stored differently in your brain than memories of the last time you washed your car...PTSD, anyone? Flashbacks, nightmares, uncontrollable responses to 'trigger' situations, etc...
Really interesting stuff.
I think the reason why time seems to stand still during moments of intense stress is because we are so intensely focused, not allowing any distractions whatsoever, so that we are minutely, rapidly aware of what we are dealing with. I wonder what that would look like on the fMRI.
Thanks for sharing this article.
Time also went in slow motion for patients who were waiting in the waiting room or exam room for treatment when I worked in a walk in center. I don't know why but despite having either music or a TV to watch and tons of magazines (or something they brought along with them), they would complain at even the shortest wait times. I always thought they were impatient or ignorant about the workings of a medical practice. The ones who would complain of the long wait then sometimes talked a lot and kept the doctor longer than necessary therefore making all the other patients wait!
I tripped and fell down a short flight of stairs, heading for a concrete floor a couple of years ago. It was the first time ever that I felt that slow motion time, it seemed like an eternity before I hit the floor. It was such a weird experience, exactly what this study was addressing.
Regarding the comment by the happy hospitalist about depression, I agree since I know people who have been in depressed states and have seen first hand the very different perceived reality. One of the most dangerous is when the depressed person under medication who is then not depressed feels they can take themselves off medications as 'they don't need it'. There is no logic there, a lack of seeing cause and effect.
Then when they are in a severely depressed state so many times they have again a warped view of reality where they don't think they are having a problem, acting abnormal, hindered at basic living abilities and so on. This includes even very obvious things like not realizing they are dirty, their hair needs washing, their clothing is a mess, and so on.
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