Ryan Shelton
๐ค SpeakerVoice Profile Active
This person's voice can be automatically recognized across podcast episodes using AI voice matching.
Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Thank you all for tuning in.
Summer's great.
We love summer.
Get back to the beach.
Or maybe you're at the beach right now.
It is always his advice.
All right.
We'll see you next week, everyone, for more Summer Bonus.
There is no specific structure that controls it.
In general, our understanding is that our perception of time is a combination of a variety of factors such as attention, arousal, emotions and environmental cues
Time can appear to move faster if we are in a positive state and have a high approach motivation, the desire and drive to do something, or find activities so enjoyable and immersive that time seems to pass by faster than usual, which is sometimes referred to as a flow state.
Conversely, focusing our attention on something can also make time seem to move slower.
When the possibility of reward is present,
Stimuli are perceived as lasting longer than when there is little or no prospective reward.
These results seem to indicate that if a stimulus is associated with a reward, it becomes more salient, grabbing more of our attention and thus distorting how long we perceive it to last.
Time can also seem to move slower if we experience awe, likely from feeling more present and in the moment, or fear, possibly so we have more time to prepare and to react to fear-inducing stimuli.
Our experience of time is also influenced by cues from our bodies, visual input, body movements, and information we receive from our tissues,
are connected to time perception, leading to what is called the embodied perspective of time perception in humans, which tells us that our brain's interpretation of signals throughout our body is a crucial element of how we perceive time.
And I'm Ryan Shelton from My Mum.
And I'm Josh from Hugh's Mum.