Does Your Heartbeat Shape Your Sense of Time? | Irena Arslanova | TED

43,675 views ・ 2025-01-22

TED


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I am a cognitive neuroscientist,
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and I'm trying to understand how we perceive time
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and how our perception of time arises from the workings of our brain.
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Why?
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Why do I want to understand that?
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Well, time is the ultimate master of our lives.
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We are all constantly faced with its fleeting nature.
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Yet how we feel the passing of time
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can be highly malleable.
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When we are bored, in pain,
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but also when we encounter something novel or extraordinary,
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time feels to be passing much slower
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than when we are busy or simply having fun.
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But what does it mean to feel time?
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And why does the feeling of time distort
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depending on the situation, our level of focus, our emotional state?
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Do these distortions serve some function,
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and can we gain some level of control over how we feel time?
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These are very big questions,
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and we do not have the answer to any of them.
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Not just yet.
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But I will tell you about a surprising discovery
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I believe will take us a step closer
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to unlocking the neural basis of time.
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And I will show you that time is not something
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that is created solely by the brain,
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but it is also intimately shaped
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by what is happening inside the rest of the body.
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I work in the Lab of Action and Body at Royal Holloway,
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University of London,
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and in our lab we look at the brain
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from an embodied point of view.
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What this means is that we believe
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we cannot fully understand the workings of the brain
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if we take it out of the body,
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because after all,
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the main reason for us to have a brain
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is to keep the body alive,
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so that we can act in the world.
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And for that,
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it is not enough for the brain to perceive
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what is happening in the world around us,
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but it also needs to perceive what is happening inside of our own body.
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It needs to understand what our body needs at any moment in time.
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That additional internal sense,
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the perception of the body from within
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is called interoception.
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And one example of interoception
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is the perception of our own heart.
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Yes, the heart.
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I think all of us know that the main function of the heart
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is to transport oxygen-rich blood all through the body,
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and like other bodily functions, it is controlled by the brain.
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So when I’m on the move,
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the heart should start beating faster to provide more oxygen.
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When I need to slow down and focus,
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it will also slow down to preserve the oxygen.
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But what many of you may not know
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is that the activity of the heart itself
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shapes the activity of the brain.
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But before I get into that,
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let me give you some very basic neuroscience.
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So the brain receives information
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from the outside world through our eyes, through our ears.
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But to make sense of that information, to perceive,
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it has specialized sensory areas,
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like the visual sensory area
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that allows us to see the redness of the TEDx sign,
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or the auditory-sensory areas
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that allow us to hear the sound of my voice.
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The information can be the same,
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but our perception can differ very much.
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But in order to act in response to what we perceive,
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the brain has separate movement control centers
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that are responsible for initiating and controlling movement.
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That's what makes me move my hands constantly as I'm speaking.
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So how does the heart shape the brain then?
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Well, it turns out
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that there are sensory neurons in our heart
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that fire signals to our brain
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to inform it about the state of the body.
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But they fire only at a time when the heart contracts,
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and they remain silent when the heart is relaxed.
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So the brain and the heart are in a constant rhythmic dance.
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Every beat makes the brain step into an active mode,
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priming us for action.
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And between the beats, the brain steps back into perceptual mode,
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priming us to take in information.
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Now imagine what happens when the heart starts beating faster.
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There are more beats,
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so the brain is more likely to be in the active mode,
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whereas when the heart slows down,
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there are more periods of time between the beats,
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so the brain is more likely to be in the perceptual mode.
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This got me thinking.
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If the heart shapes perception in such a way,
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will it also shape the perception of time?
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Is there a causal relationship
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between our heart and how we experience time?
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Of course, we tested that in our lab.
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We invited 67 volunteers to participate in a study
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where we asked them to judge very brief durations of different stimuli.
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These could be sounds, images of simple shapes,
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images of people showing different emotions.
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We wanted to systematically determine whether what participants felt and sensed
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influenced how they perceived durations.
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But the key part of that study was that we hooked the volunteers
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to an ECG machine
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so we could see their heart beating in real time
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while they were doing this study.
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And this allowed us to flash the stimuli
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precisely at the moment when the heart squeezed tight
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or when it relaxed.
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And what we found
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was that stimuli that occurred during heart's contraction
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were perceived to last shorter
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than stimuli that occurred between the beats,
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when the heart was relaxed.
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What this means is that the momentary state of the heart
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caused time to contract and expand within each heartbeat.
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Why am I so excited about this finding?
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Well because it shows that perception of time
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is an embodied experience.
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It might be constructed in the brain,
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but it is molded by the body.
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And I'm sure it seems intuitive, you know,
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that something rhythmic, like the heartbeat,
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would influence something rhythmic like time perception.
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But now we have a scientific evidence
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for that intuition.
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What's more,
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I can use these heart-driven time distortions
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to look at what is happening in the brain
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just before duration is distorted by each beat.
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Could it be that distortions in time
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are connected to how each heartbeat
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affects the sensory and the movement centers of the brain?
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Remember how I told you that each beat momentarily suppressed perception,
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but between the beats, suppression was momentarily increased?
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So could it be ...
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And we showed that time is contracted during the beat,
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but expanded in between the beats.
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So could it be that our experience of time
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arises from the way in which our brain takes in sensory information
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that is shaped by the heart?
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And if that is true,
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could the function
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of our highly distorted sense of time
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be to shift us between an active and perceptual mode?
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Time could contract when we need to move,
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but it may expand when we want to perceive.
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So maybe that slowing of time you feel when you're bored
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is there to actually expand your perception
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and allow your mind to wander to something new.
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I hope I've shown you
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that one way to shape how we experience time
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is to work on the internal state
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of our body.
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So the next time
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time becomes a little bit too fleeting,
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like right now for me --
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(Laughter)
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Let’s maybe try to take a deep breath.
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(Inhales)
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(Exhales)
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Yeah?
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Feel the heart slow down,
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and let the brain expand the moment.
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And maybe that momentary expansion of time
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will also broaden our perception.
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Thank you very much for listening. Thank you.
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(Applause)
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