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  • I remember when I was a kid waiting an hour for my favorite TV show to come on,

  • which was Sharon, Lois & Bram.

  • That felt like eternity, but as I've gotten older, everything seems to have sped up.

  • Time is going much faster. That's something virtually everyone agrees upon.

  • "Yeah, I feel like- I feel like it does."

  • "Oh man, so much."

  • "Each year sort of gets faster and faster."

  • But why is this? Is it just an illusion or are there good scientific reasons why time appears to go faster

  • as we get older?

  • Well, I'm working with the National Geographic Channel's Brain Games, a show that explores

  • the inner workings of the human mind through experiments and interactive games to test out some

  • theories about why this actually occurs.

  • There is a reasonable sounding argument that says each year goes faster because it makes up a smaller fraction

  • of your entire life.

  • "Let's say I was only 20. One year is only 1/20th of my age. But when I'm 67, one year is 1/67th of my age."

  • This graph shows one year as a percentage of your life at each age.

  • But what I find weird about this is if you add up the area underneath the curve, you'll find that you've already

  • lived half of the total by age 6.

  • So, I really don't think this is how our brains perceive time.

  • You really think that, like, a day now is-

  • "Of course not." [laughter]

  • I think there are better reasons why time appears to speed up as we get older.

  • So I've come to Venice Beach to find two groups of people: The older and younger

  • to see if their perceptions of time differ.

  • So what I want to do is I want to set my timer going and without counting,

  • you tell me when you think a minute is up.

  • "Let's go."

  • Start.

  • "Okay."

  • Everywhere around the world, when this experiment is performed, older people typically overestimate

  • while younger people measure it quite accurately.

  • "Alright, probably stop?"

  • "Yep."

  • Wooo, one minute, two seconds.

  • A minute and two seconds.

  • A minute and five.

  • As we get older, the rate at which our neurons fire, or our neuron conduction velocity, it decreases.

  • And you can think of this firing rate a little bit like an internal clock.

  • And so, if our internal clock is slowing down, that would make everything else, external time,

  • seem to be speeding up.

  • "I'm going to tell you the time."

  • Now?

  • "Now."

  • "One minute."

  • That's it? That was one minute?

  • "One minute."

  • Minute, seventeen seconds.

  • "Not bad, right?"

  • Not bad.

  • "I thought I'd be a lot closer actually, but I guess I wasn't."

  • Do you want to know what it really was?

  • One minute forty seven.

  • "No way, it was almost two minutes? It was actually almost two minutes."

  • "It really is amazing how fast time flies by, it really is."

  • Our sense of time, or chronoception, is not like one of the standard five senses. It has no specialized

  • receptor cells and it does not appear to be localized in just one part of the brain.

  • Perhaps this suggests that it's not one coherent thing at all.

  • But it does seem that our perception of time is very fundamental.

  • Studies of rats have shown that even with their neocortex removed - that is, the higher order thinking

  • part of their brains- They are still able to learn how to time forty seconds accurately.

  • That's quite remarkable, and it suggests our sense of time evolved early and is one of the fundamental

  • functions of the brain.

  • But that doesn't mean out brains always represent time faithfully.

  • For example, have you noticed that really good movies seem to go by much faster than they actually are?

  • Or do you notice that your vacations fly by? There are good reasons for this.

  • When we're focused on something, we don't notice that time is passing and that makes them feel in the moment

  • shorter than they actually are.

  • At its best, this results in a mental state called "flow". This can happen when playing sports or video games

  • or artists when they're fully engrossed in their work or people meditating.

  • So I would argue another reason time speeds up as we age is because we are more often engrossed in

  • what we're doing.

  • Another thing that appears to make time speed up is repetition. I'm going to show you a series of images

  • and I want you to consider how long each one appears on the screen.

  • Are you ready?

  • Go.

  • So which one appeared to last the longest? If you're like most people, you'd probably say the dog.

  • But all of those images actually appeared on screen fore the same length of time. The dog seemed longer

  • because it was novel and therefore, your brain had to invest more energy in processing it.

  • What's remarkable is that our sense of how long something is - or subjective duration-

  • It correlates highly with how much energy we're using in our brains. Now, if you study how much energy people

  • use in their brains over the course of their lifetime, you'll find that it peaks around age five.

  • If you think about it, this kind of makes sense because when you're a kid, almost everything is novel to you.

  • And therefore, your brain needs to use more energy, fully 66% of your resting energy intake.

  • That's used by the brain because of all the novel experiences and that must, at least in part,

  • explain why time appears to go more slowly.

  • So, what can we do to slow time down? Well, studies have shown that being afraid increases our perception

  • of time.

  • When arachnophobes were forced to stare at spiders for 45 seconds - Yes, this is a real experiment -

  • Those arachnophobes judged that experience as lasting much longer than 45 seconds,

  • as you would kind of expect.

  • Plus, experiments involving skydivers or people falling showed that they judged their experience to last

  • much longer than it actually is.

  • Another time when time appears to pass slowly is when you're bored.

  • "You know, when you're waiting and waiting, that's all you think about, so it seems like time drags forever."

  • Since there is so little to focus on, you are acutely aware of just how much time is passing,

  • and so these boring moments drag on and on.

  • So, if you really want to slow down your experience of time, you could scare yourself, take up extreme sports,

  • get into accidents and intersperse all of that with periods of boredom.

  • But this viewpoint ignores one important fact, which is that we don't experience time as just one thing.

  • We think about time as it passe, but also as it has passed before, when we remember it.

  • And those two ways of looking at time, they don't align.

  • So for example, holidays, they feel like they go by really fast, but when you think back upon them,

  • they last a long time.

  • That's because you had a lot of novel experiences and your brain formed a lot of memories.

  • And it judges the duration of that vacation by the number of memories that were formed.

  • All that novelty means lots of memories means it feels like it took a long time, but in the moment, it felt fast.

  • This is the paradox, the great paradox, of our perception of time.

  • If you want time to go slowly, there are a lot of things you can expose yourself to that will slow time down,

  • but they won't necessarily be pleasant.

  • So maybe the happiest life and the longest remembered life is one where time really seems to fly.

  • It's like Einstein said, "Put your hand on a stove for a minute and it'll feel like an hour.

  • But sit next to a pretty girl for an hour and it'll feel like a minute."

  • So, what would you like your life to feel like?

  • I want to thank the National Geographic Channel for sponsoring this episode of Veritasium.

  • And if you want to introduce more novelty into your life, than you should check out their series, "Brain Games"

  • The new season begins February 14th at 9/8 Central. And this season, they have an episode about

  • all of your senses, including your sense of time, chronoception.

  • So if you want to find out more, than check out the link to their website in the description.

  • And thank you for watching.

  • Did that feel like that lasted long?

I remember when I was a kid waiting an hour for my favorite TV show to come on,

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