Science
Related: About this forumHow the human brain builds our sense of time
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2026-04-human-brain.htmlAnother fascinating article on a similar subject:
How time and space become one inside your brain -- and what it means for Alzheimer's
Using high-field functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and measuring time perception in healthy volunteers, the researchers shed light on what happens in the brain when we estimate the duration of a visual stimulus. "Our results show that time perception is not a unitary process, but the outcome of multiple processing stages distributed across the cerebral cortex," the authors explain. "Each stage contributes differently, from encoding physical duration to constructing the subjective experience of time."
In an initial stage, occipital visual areas encode duration through gradual (monotonic) neural responses: the longer the stimulus, the stronger the neural response. This information is then transformed in parietal and premotor regions into selective (unimodal) representations, where distinct neural populations respond preferentially to specific durations, enabling the "readout" of time. Finally, higher-order regions, including the frontal cortex and anterior insula, are involved in the subjective categorization of duration, shaping how time is perceived.
The study goes beyond identifying where time is processed in the brain, proposing instead a mechanistic model of how temporal information is processed. This new framework not only advances our understanding of time perception but also opens new avenues for investigating how the brain constructs subjective time--and why this experience can sometimes be distorted.
Publication details
Valeria Centanino et al, Neuronal populations across the cortex underlie discrete, categorical, and subjective representations of visual durations, PLOS Biology (2026). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3003704
young_at_heart
(4,044 posts)Made me contemplate the huge role our brains play in so many aspects of everyday life and how we seldom give any thought to how it all works!
John1956PA
(4,970 posts)My brain was able to correctly assess that I had napped for about an hour, which I confirmed by looking at the time markings on the DU posts which I had been reading.
erronis
(23,916 posts)before looking.. Usually I'm within 5-10 minutes.
And I almost always wake up just before an alarm is set to go off.
highplainsdem
(62,221 posts)highplainsdem
(62,221 posts)erronis
(23,916 posts)I really like RSS feed-readers. I have around 50 subscriptions and around 400-500 new articles every day. I've found I can scan the titles (one liners) pretty quickly to see if a subject triggers some visual recognition pattern and then delve in. (Maybe I'm an AI?) I use Inoreader (paid) but there are lots of free alternatives.