One study determined that it is heart the organ closest to the perception or sense of time. Published this month in the magazine Psychophysiology, noted that, when observed at the microsecond level, some of the time distortions could be driven by their heartbeats.
It is known that time seems to expand or contract depending on the circumstances, since in a state of alarm, the seconds can lengthen, while when you are trying to meet a deadline, the hours go by.
The study of the Cornell Universityspread by the New York Timesfound that, when observed at the microsecond level, some of these distortions could be driven by the heartbeat. heart, whose duration varies from moment to moment.
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The study that connected heart with time
Psychologists attached EKGs to college students to accurately measure the duration of each heartbeat. heart and then asked them to estimate the duration of short audio tones. They found that after a longer heartbeat interval, subjects tended to perceive the tone as longer, while shorter intervals led subjects to rate the tone as shorter. After each tone, the subjects’ heartbeat intervals lengthened.
“A lower heart rate seemed to help with perception,” he said. Saeedeh Sadeghilead author of the study.
“When we need to perceive things from the outside world, the heartbeat is a noise for the cortex. You can perceive the world more, it is easier to introduce things when the heart It’s silent,” he added.
In a study done during the pandemic, older and more socially isolated people reported that time slowed down and younger and more active people reported that it sped up.
The study provides further evidence, after an era of brain-focused research, that “there is no single part of the brain or body that keeps time; everything is a network, ”he said, adding:“ The brain controls the heart and the heart, in turn, impacts the brain”.
Interest in the perception of time has skyrocketed since the coronavirus pandemic. Covid-19when activity outside the home came to an abrupt halt for many and people around the world found themselves facing undifferentiated periods of time.
A study of the perception of time carried out during the first year of confinement in Britain found that 80 percent of the participants reported distortions in time, in different directions. On average, older and more socially isolated people reported that time slowed down, and younger and more active people reported that it sped up.
“Our experience of time is affected in ways that reflect, in general, our well-being,” he said. ruth ogdenprofessor of psychology at the John Moores University of Liverpool and author of the closing study.
“People with depression experience a slowdown in time, and this is experienced as a factor in worsening depression.”
Source: Ambito

I am an author and journalist who has worked in the entertainment industry for over a decade. I currently work as a news editor at a major news website, and my focus is on covering the latest trends in entertainment. I also write occasional pieces for other outlets, and have authored two books about the entertainment industry.