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February 15, 2008

Perception of Time

One issue relevant to performing time-based prospective memory tasks is the ability to accurately judge the passing of time. There has been some interesting research on this topic suggesting that as we get older, we perceive time as moving faster.

There's no dearth of anecdotal evidence here either. As children, a simple afternoon just barely creep along and the school year lasts an eternity. Ask an older adult how quickly time passes and you'll hear just the opposite. There are various explantions (not necessarily mutually exclusive). The attentional explanation is that the amount and type of information we are processing affect time perception (e.g. "time flies when you're busy"), but there are also more psychosocial explanations: as we get older life gets more repetitive, and it is variety and change that leads to the perception that time moves more slowly (i.e., what happens in early life). Check out the links below and let's hear your ideas and input.

The following is a good intro into perceptions of time:
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/jmkenney/

This book chapter provides some evidence for attentional explanations:
http://www.worldscibooks.com/lifesci/etextbook/5937/5937_chap1.pdf

Chicken and Egg question: which came first language or explicit/episodic memory?

This question strikes at the heart of how we humans came to be. Homo Sapiens literally translates into "wise man". Is our wisdom dependent on language or explicit memory or necessarily both? Can you have one without the other? And, which do you think we evolved first during the course of evolution.

February 5, 2008

Cognition and Voting

Some experts say that our candidate choice is partially determined by the amount of cognitive (attentional) resources available. Check out the article below. What do you think? What candidate factors do people really pay attention to during elections?

http://www.newsweek.com/id/107601