Why does time seem to speed up as we get older ?

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Anchor Moy
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Why does time seem to speed up as we get older ?

Post by Anchor Moy »

Do you remember when a day was a long time to wait for something, and summer holidays went on forever ?
Why does time get "used up" faster the longer you live ?

How did it get so late so soon?
It’s night before it’s afternoon.
December is here before it’s June.
My goodness how the time has flewn.
How did it get so late so soon?

Dr Seuss :dm:

The passage of time is a puzzling thing. While few will dispute that a minute comprises 60 seconds, the perception of time can vary dramatically from person to person and from one situation to the next. Time can race, or it can drag interminably. On rare occasions, it feels as if it’s standing still.

The difference between “real” time, measured by clocks and calendars, and our own individual sense of time can sometimes seem enormous. This is because, in many ways, we are the architects of our sense of time.
Measuring time

Humans have created reliable instruments to measure time by using predictable repeating events that occur naturally, such as day turning to night or winter becoming spring. We think of these events in terms of days, weeks and years, and we use clocks and calendars to mark their passage.

But we also appear to possess an internal timepiece, which regulates our circadian (day/night) rhythms and allows us to register the duration of particular events. We use this “pacemaker” to compare the length of each new event with representations stored in memory. Effectively, we build up a knowledge bank of what a minute, an hour or a day feels like.

What typically begins as our brain’s ability to register short durations - from minutes to seconds - is transformed into an understanding of the flow of time across the lifespan. But, unfortunately, our internal pacemaker doesn’t always keep time as accurately as our external gadgets.

Individual perceptions of time are strongly influenced by our level of focus, physical state and mood. Just as “a watched pot never boils”, when we are concentrating on an event, time occasionally appears to pass more slowly than usual. This is also the case when we’re bored; time can seem to drag endlessly.

In other circumstances, time can appear to speed up. When our attention is divided, for instance, and we’re busy with several things at once, time seems to pass by much more swiftly. This may be because we pay less attention to the flow of time when we are multi-tasking.

The emotional quality of an event also influences our perception of time. Negative emotional states, such as feeling sad or depressed, have the effect of making time feel as if it’s passing more slowly. Fear has a particularly powerful effect on time, slowing down our internal clock so that the fearful event is perceived as lasting longer. In contrast, fun and happy times seem to be over in the blink of an eye.

Just as time may slow or quicken depending on our current emotional state, our perception of time may also become distorted as we age. People over the age of 60 often report time becoming more variable. Christmas seems to come around sooner each year, and yet the days feel long and drawn out.
Key factors

Anomalies in time perception as we age may relate to a number of necessary cognitive processes, including how much attention we can devote to a particular task and how effectively we can divide our attention between several ongoing tasks at once. Our efficiency in these domains gradually dampens as we age and may influence the subjective perception of time.

Perhaps more importantly, our frame of reference for the duration of events also changes as we age. Memories we have stored throughout our lives allow us to create a personal timeline. There’s a suggestion that our perception of time may be in proportion to the length of our lifespan. Known as the “proportional theory”, this idea posits that as we age, our sense of “present” time begins to feel relatively short in comparison to our entire lifespan.

Proportional theory makes intuitive sense if we consider how a year in the lifespan of someone who is 75 years old may feel much quicker, for instance, in comparison to a year in the life of a ten-year-old. But it cannot fully explain our experience of present time as we can move from hour to hour and day to day independently of the past...
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style ... 14396.html
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Bitte_Kein_Lexus
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Re: Why does time seem to speed up as we get older ?

Post by Bitte_Kein_Lexus »

Watch this vsauce video when you get the chance:
Ex Bitteeinbit/LexusSchmexus
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Re: Why does time seem to speed up as we get older ?

Post by Jamie_Lambo »

interesting thanks :)
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vladimir
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Re: Why does time seem to speed up as we get older ?

Post by vladimir »

AM has been stalking me, I was discussing this very thing with a friend yesterday.
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potty
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Re: Why does time seem to speed up as we get older ?

Post by potty »

The study found that an average of 3 minutes and 3 seconds passed when participants in the younger group (19 - 24) estimated that 3 minutes had passed, whereas the older group's (60 - 80) estimate for when 3 minutes had passed came after an average of 3 minutes and 40 seconds
Drugs that activate dopamine receptors speed up ones perception of time, while dopamine antagonists cause one to feel that time is passing slowly.[5]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_perc ... s_with_age

but dopamine has so thoroughly proven to be crap in treatment of everything, that it will be a dead end with this, too, most likely.
today there was an article in the dailymail, which I cant find anymore, and I read only the headline.
they found neurons or peptides which get activated when running/jogging.
means, when gaining physical speed of some sort, rather than a metabolism push.

following this, its not unlikely that these/such neuronal changes are also the culprits with the time perception.
sounds perhaps at first glance far stretched, but imo it could have to do with the eyes.
potty
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Re: Why does time seem to speed up as we get older ?

Post by potty »

cloudflare...

actually, they suspect dopamine to be the culprit. but dopamine has proven crap at best with really everything.


but its quite definitely so, that ageing changes the perception.
a test (see wiki time perception) proved that when 3:03 minutes had passed, the 20something thought it was 3:00 mins, and the 60-80 estimated 3:40 mins
.
today there was an article somewhere stating something about a molecule or a peptide or neurons that are activated when (physically) running. gaining speed.
I think, this could have to do with the eyes. they should test again with folded eyes, or also older people with (long time) perfect glasses, if the time perception differs.
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Re: Why does time seem to speed up as we get older ?

Post by TheGrinchSR »

This phenomenon has already been well-researched. Time gets faster as you get older because it's an internal comparison. When you're a 5 year old, a year of your life is 20% of the time you've spent on earth - it's a long time. When you're 50, that year is a poxy 2% of the time you've existed for - a very much shorter time comparatively speaking. Our bodies only have a single reference point for comparison - our own experience and that's why time speeds up as we get older.
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Re: Why does time seem to speed up as we get older ?

Post by GonzoBobH »

TheGrinchSR wrote:This phenomenon has already been well researched.
Can I get a link to PubMed or other well researched site which cites your, ummm.... finding/conclusions?

If not, calling nullification. I mean, B.S.

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TheGrinchSR
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Re: Why does time seem to speed up as we get older ?

Post by TheGrinchSR »

http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/min ... get-older/

Scientific American - no BS involved. They even used my example: "The amount of time passed relative to one’s age varies.
For a 5-year-old, one year is 20% of their entire life. For a 50-year-old, however, one year is only 2% of their life. This “ratio theory,” proposed by Janet in 1877, suggests that we are constantly comparing time intervals with the total amount of time we’ve already lived."
"If you want a vision of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face - forever." - George Orwell
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Re: Why does time seem to speed up as we get older ?

Post by Kung-fu Hillbilly »

The universe is expanding with dark energy increasing the rate of which our galaxy is moving away from everything else. As this speed increases time dilation is experienced by matter, with objects of greater mass experiencing a faster red shift through the space time continuum. As we age we gain mass (get fatter) and are subjected to increased relativistic time dilation giving the perception of time going faster.

Hope that helps.
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