Why Your Brain Is Slow (And Fast, Too) | Big Think

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Why Your Brain Is Slow (And Fast, Too)
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Need to know the time? Just look at a clock. But if your brain needs to tell the time, it's a whole other different theory. Neuroscientist Dean Buonomano is an expert on brains (obviously) but posits that your brain tells time much more by a domino effect than by any sort of mechanism. He uses an interesting pebble-pond-ripple scenario to walk us through it, saying that "if you throw a pebble into a pond it can create this dynamical pattern. And in a way that pattern tells you how much time has elapsed." Much in the same way, our brain simply looks for patterns. Buonomano goes into it in more detail than we do here in this paragraph, but the science is largely that simple: our brains tell time by looking for disruptions in the moments of zen.
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DEAN BUONOMANO:

Dean Buonomano was among the first neuroscientists to begin to ask how the human brain encodes time. It’s not an easy concept to grasp, Buonomano says, and for that reason many researchers overlook it. “The first field of modern science was probably geometry, which was formalized by Euclid around 300 B.C.,” says the researcher, “What’s amazing about geometry is that there is absolutely no time involved; it’s the study of things that never change. And there’s a reason why it is one of the first science fields. Science is much easier if you can ignore time.”

Buonomano was in grad school when he became enamored of the question of how we navigate through time. As a graduate student at the University of Texas (UT) Health Science Center at Houston, Buonomano collaborated with Michael Mauk after he heard Mauk’s lecture on his studies of the neural circuits in the cerebellum. Mauk and Buonomano modeled the way the cerebellum’s circuits could respond to stimuli and showed that this type of neuronal network can differentiate between time intervals that differ by just tens of milliseconds. Such networks also have the ability to tune the timing of their responses, the two found. “My collaboration with him was absolutely formative for me,” says Buonomano. “Mauk had this very influential notion that time is encoded in the changing patterns of neuronal activity.”

today, Buonomano’s laboratory at the University of California, Los Angeles, uses computational modeling, in vitro electrophysiology, and human psychophysics experiments to explore how neurons and the brain as a whole perceive and respond to time. Here, Buonomano describes how he performed his first experiments on his little sister, bathed mice with antidandruff shampoo, and hypothesized that timing is so integral to brain function that all of our brain’s circuits keep tabs on the clock. 

In his new book, Your Brain Is a Time Machine, brain researcher and best-selling author Dean Buonomano draws on evolutionary biology, physics, and philosophy to present his influential theory of how we tell, and perceive, time. The human brain, he argues, is a complex system that not only tells time but creates it; it constructs our sense of chronological flow and enables “mental time travel”—simulations of future and past events. These functions are essential not only to our daily lives but to the evolution of the human race: without the ability to anticipate the future, mankind would never have crafted tools or invented agriculture. The brain was designed to navigate our continuously changing world by predicting what will happen and when.
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TRANSCRIPT:

Dean Buonomano: So human beings have been building clocks for millennium and it’s been a long endeavor of our species from sundials to hour glasses to pendulum clocks to quartz watches to car and atomic clocks.

Yet the brain has been telling time since the dawn of animal species, right? So even plants have the ability to tell time in terms of circadian clock.

So one of the mysteries in neuroscience that many people are studying is how the brain tells time. So in order to understand how the brain tells time it’s useful to quickly remember how manmade clocks work. And there’s a vast diversity of manmade clocks from pendulums to quartz watches to atomic clocks. And as diverse as these things are they share a common principle, an almost embarrassingly simple principle, which is just counting the ticks of an oscillator. So with the pendulum you just count the ticks of the pendulum going back and forth. In the quartz watch you’re just counting the mechanica...

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I feel like my mind is working so slow, I can’t read so fast anymore, and I cannot focus like i used to before.

Crappy.
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I am 18 and reallly slow. In fact it wasnt until 18 that i realized I had responsibilities to take over from my dad. Before i was a 9 year old in a teenager's body. I hated math since 3rd grade because i didn't understand it and simply allowed myself to get distracted with videogames. Now I have this newfound interest in Maths at 18, and am learning from 3rd grade itself on KhanAcademy. I know it's too late and not much can be done now.

puneethvenkatrao
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I perform too slow solving math problems even which I solved earlier. I also get panicked unnecessarily and trying to overcome. But people around me love to scare (Specially who are much faster than me) me more and always find fault in me instead of helping me gaining confidence.

namelesswonder
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Recently I have trouble talking in real life (E.G like there's a delay of at least of couple of seconds before i speak)
I guess i gotta keep practicing til this goes away,
if anyone reading this you are not alone <3 & you are not slow just keep working at it.

joltjoseph
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When I speak to anyone at my school they sometimes don't understand me because they say that I'm using "fancy words" or something similar to that. I give out a lot of facts about what the subject is and I'm not doing it because I want to look smart or anything don't get me wrong. But I just do it because I know the answer to that question and I just want to let them know how it works and why.

strapsgaming
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I feel stupid and slow and I used to not feel like that am I sick

romannavarro
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Ok, slow thought down when I am unable to communicate correctly with a jumble of ideas. Exercise when I'm feeling a similar problem....This is a difficult concept to convey, but I hope I understand correctly.

Dfins
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im very slow especially when there come numbers and also the phone calls from stragers while i can process everything from my family

subject-no.
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It's glad to see that I'm not the only person with this kind of problem. I've been in all these special English and math classes during high-school. If you were to find the dumbest person in my grade, it would be me. Thankfully I finished and completed high-school. Now I'm slowly educating myself to grow up. I'm 17 years old with half of my Brian acting like a 12 year old . You can also tell by my poor grammer in this comment. Anyway I didn't even know that this was a thing, I thought I was just stupid and that's what lead me having low self esteem. It takes a whole year for me to develop what I've learned the previous year. Guys and girls with this issue you are not alone and don't give up, be strong and stay true to yourself. I've smoked weed too and it has effected me but that doesn't mean it's too late to change. You can still change it all depends on you to make that step into life. God bless and I know that you will make it through in this life, I'm still struggling but I'm still gonna fight.

OGvibes-tqzl
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Well somehow i can only talk slowly in my brain all of a sudden like in slow motion and like i cant talk fast in my brain because something is blocking me
and idk what
It might be because im sick rn

bubblelovessans
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im 20 and im not that slow but im so annoying and childish. give me a solution

coldasfire
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Okay, based on my interpretation of the comments some people with self-doubt regarding their own intelligence arrived here via search. I would point out that hyperfocusing on your own thought process can lead to that doubt, and may impede/interfere with your life in general. This is circular logic and could just be simple anxiety. My best advice would be to talk to a professional if you feel its interfering with your life. But again, this is the internet. Don't believe everything your read... especially this comment.

NightFlight
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I'm very slow in understanding anything if any anyone ask me any question I don't understand it fast it takes me time to understand things even if I the answer

smifavno.
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i searched : why is fbi lagging my brain. and this came up
really good vid tho

squeaky
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Ok I think I got it. Slow processing and dyslexia. But why if I push real hard brain seems shut down and can't do anything but go to sleep when I wake I can function again. ?

donnaparks
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What does it mean to have a fast brain? Why it happens? Wanna know everything about it.

sirprize
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This may explain why we have two different types from memory conscious and unconscious memory they're working processing information at different speeds Dreams May prove this given so much more information is collected over a shorter period of time dreams tap into the subconscious that has no concept of time and reality the source of our imagination.
The conscious memory has a sense of time and logic informations fed to it from and mirrored from subcultures memory touch smell and taste bypassing unconscious memory therefore explaining why we do not have these sensors in dreams in the normal person that's to say.

Given the different between the speeds of light and sound the nervous system having two different types of memory is a must, also the fact that the way we see is mirrored and flipped speech is also heard in reverse of pronunciation, yet it seems at the same time with out feedback.

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