So what is actually going on when our brains are keeping track of time? I certainly don’t keep track like a stop-watch (maybe some people do, but I imagine this would be rather obsessive), and it’s more as if there’s an awareness of a series of events that happen one after another. When we remember one of these events, our brains record information related not only to the place where it happened, but also the time it happened. This is how episodic memories are formed, and we can lose some of these in cases of Alzheimer’s or dementia, where damage to certain regions of the brain can result in the degradation of memories of where and when something has happened.
Episodic memories are created in the medial temporal lobe, which is necessary for remembering durations within a sequence of events, and this seems to be involved in the internal representation of elapsed time.
Cognitive processes, as well as environmental stimuli, can impact our perception of time. Our five senses receive information and relate this to our central nervous system, where our perception of time involves a complex neural mechanism which may be influenced by our emotional state, level of attention, memory, or diseases. Due to the complex nature of the neural mechanism involved, it seems that the neuroscience behind time perception isn’t necessarily so well understood.
What has been understood so far is that there are two main areas of the brain that are involved in the perception of time – the parietal cortex and the hippocampus. Activity in the parietal lobe is related to how accurately our brain is able to actually keep track of time, whereas the hippocampus is involved in how we perceive time on a longer range, which allows for the development of long-term memory. Research has even shown that the hippocampus contains neurons that represent the flow of time in specific memories, leading them to be dubbed ‘time cells’. These cells have firing properties that are parallel to the place cells within the hippocampus, which allow for the cognitive mapping of a specific location in space. This representation of time and space within the hippocampus seems to be fairly robust, and it suggests this mechanism is essential for organising all the different elements of our experiences into consistent memories.
At a very young age, our brains are only able to perceive time as we pay attention to it, with the perception of time improving as our attention and capacity for forming short-term memory increase. This process is dependent on the slow maturation of the prefrontal cortex, which is involved in things such as planning, decision making, working memory, personality expression, and the moderation of social behaviour. To understand the time required for a task, children must be able to pay attention to it while also memorising a stream of time data without losing concentration. This might explain why children with a diagnosis of ADHD might find that their perception of time is warped, often with the experience of struggling to manage their time properly and stay on top of tasks.
Other areas in the brain – such as the anterior and posterior cingulate cortex, anterior insula cortex, prefrontal cortex, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, inferior frontal gyrus, superior temporal gyrus, the supplementary motor area, and cerebellum – are all involved in the perception of time. It’s unclear, however, which aspects of time perception the different areas relate to, and some research has focused more specifically on the basal ganglia – this is down to it being a region of the brain that is at the intersection of timing, reward, and dopamine.
We briefly touched on the impact of dopamine on the perception of time, and it seems that dopamine neurons in an area of the brain known as the substantia nigra pars compacta can alter the perception of time. Stimulating or inhibiting these dopamine cells can either make time seem like it’s moving slower or faster, where boosting dopamine activity has been shown to slow down our internal clock, which in turn leads us to underestimate time intervals. Research has shown that animals given drugs that trigger the release of dopamine responded to tasks more quickly than usual, which might suggest the internal sense of time was sped up. So what are the different drugs that humans are taking which might impact our perception of time?
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