Thursday, 19 November 2015

Technology is speeding up our perception of time

Can’t believe it’s almost Christmas? Technology is SPEEDING UP our perception of time, researchers say

  • Our brains process more information and think time passes by faster  
  • Study showed those who are always connected are stressed about time
  • Detach from the Internet each week in order to slow down time perception
  • Other research suggests technology helps process information faster


One day you’re heading to the beach for a fun day in the sun and the next you’re hanging lights and tinsel on a Christmas tree.
It feels like time speeds up more and more every year, but it’s actually technology speeding up our perception of time, one researcher says.
Smartphones, tablets and other gadgets have trained our brains to process more information, tricking us into thinking time is passing faster than it really is, according to a recent study


It feels like time speeds up more every year, but it’s actually technology speeding up our perception of time. Smartphones, tablets and other gadgets have trained our brains to process more information, tricking us into thinking time is passing faster than it really is, according to a recent study
‘I’ve found some indication that interacting with technology and technocentric societies has increased some type of pacemaker within us,’ said James Cook University researcher Dr Aoife McLoughlin in a recent interview.
‘While it might help us to work faster, it also makes us feel more pressured by time.’
The study analyzed individuals who are always connected to technology and those who rarely used it, and compared how each perceived the passage of time.



Findings indicated that those who were glued to screens overestimated the amount of time that had passed, compared to those that rarely used googled, posted or ‘liked’ anything.
Also, the individuals who used technology regularly were more stressed because they were more likely to feel like time was running out.


 
‘It's almost as though we're trying to emulate the technology and be speedier and more efficient 
Even just reading a simple advertisement, subjects perceived time as passing more quickly, than compared to the other group that a long monologue from a ‘real’ book.
‘It's almost as though we're trying to emulate the technology and be speedier and more efficient,’ McLoughlin said.
‘It seems like there’s something about technology itself that primes us to increase that pacemaker inside of us that measures the passing of time."
The findings prove what most have known all along: we need to stop and smell the roses.
In order to stop time from rushing by we need to unplug from the World Wide Web each week to slow down our pacemakers, the study suggested.
Disconnecting seems like a quick fix, but McLoughlin is going to take the study a step further to see if this phenomenon is having any long-term positive or negative effects on our lives.
Other research has shown that technology use can help us process information more efficiently, and actually become faster at performing tasks, which could help us save time in the long run.

WAYS OUR MINDS WARP TIME 

People often report that time seems to slow down in life-threatening situations, like skydiving. 
Listening to music you enjoy seems to slow down time. This may be because when we enjoy music we listen more carefully, getting lost in it. Greater attention leads to perception of a longer interval of time.
The fact that we intuitively believe time flies when we’re having fun may have more to do with how time seems to slow when we’re not having fun. Boredom draws our attention to the passage of time which gives us the feeling that it’s slowing down. 
The stopped clock illusion happens when you look at an analogue watch and the second-hand seems to freeze for longer than a second before moving on. What is happening is that when your eyes move from one point to another, your perception of time stretches slightly.
When things happen very close together in time, our brains fuse them together into a single snapshot of the present.
The effort of trying to either suppress or enhance our emotional reactions seems to change our perception of time. Psychologists have found that when people are trying to regulate their emotions, time seems to drag on. 
The University of Toronto study discovered people who play action video games such as Call of Duty or Assassin's Creed seem to learn a new sensorimotor skill more quickly than non-gamers do.
A new sensorimotor skill, such as learning to ride a bike or typing, often requires a new pattern of coordination between vision and motor movement. With such skills, an individual generally moves from novice performance, characterized by a low degree of coordination, to expert performance, marked by a high degree of coordination. 
As a result of successful sensorimotor learning, one comes to perform these tasks efficiently and perhaps even without consciously thinking about them, the researchers say.




 



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