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Home » How Your Heartbeat Shapes Your Experience of Time: Irena Arslanova (Transcript)

How Your Heartbeat Shapes Your Experience of Time: Irena Arslanova (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of cognitive neuroscientist Irena Arslanova’s talk titled “How Your Heartbeat Shapes Your Experience of Time” at TEDxBerlin 2024 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

I am a cognitive neuroscientist, and I’m trying to understand how we perceive time and how our perception of time arises from the workings of our brain. Why? Why do I want to understand that? Well, time is the ultimate master of our lives. We are all constantly faced with its fleeting nature, yet how we feel the passing of time can be highly malleable.

When we are bored, in pain, but also when we encounter something novel or extraordinary, time feels to be passing much slower than when we are busy or simply having fun. But what does it mean to feel time, and why does the feeling of time distort, depending on the situation, our level of focus, our emotional state? Do these distortions serve some function, and can we gain some level of control over how we feel time? These are very big questions, and we do not have the answer to any of them, not just yet.

A Surprising Discovery

But I will tell you about a surprising discovery I believe will take us a step closer to unlocking the neural basis of time. And I will show you that time is not something that is created solely by the brain, but it is also intimately shaped by what is happening inside the rest of the body.

I work in the lab of action and body at Royal Holloway, University of London where, and in our lab, we look at the brain from an embodied point of view. What this means is that we believe we cannot fully understand the workings of the brain if we take it out of the body, because after all, the main reason for us to have a brain is to keep the body alive so that we can act in the world.

Interoception and the Heart

And for that, it is not enough for the brain to perceive what is happening in the world around us, but it also needs to perceive what is happening inside of our own body.