• News
  • Film and TV
  • Music
  • Tech
  • Features
  • Celebrity
  • Politics
  • Weird
  • Community
  • Advertise
  • Terms
  • Privacy & Cookies
  • LADbible Group
  • LADbible
  • SPORTbible
  • GAMINGbible
  • Tyla
  • UNILAD Tech
  • FOODbible
  • License Our Content
  • About Us & Contact
  • Jobs
  • Latest
  • Topics A-Z
  • Authors
Facebook
Instagram
X
Threads
TikTok
YouTube
Submit Your Content
Neuroscientist Explains Why Time 'Goes Quicker' As We Get Older

Home> News

Published 17:38 25 Jul 2022 GMT+1

Neuroscientist Explains Why Time 'Goes Quicker' As We Get Older

Neuroscientist David Eagleman explained that as we get older our minds trick us into believing, 'we're all living a little bit in the past'.

Lisa McLoughlin

Lisa McLoughlin

Do you ever find yourself looking at old Instagram photos, asking, ‘where has the time gone?’ As we get older, it feels as though time quite literally is flying past us, but it didn’t feel like when we were children.

In fact, it felt as though time stood still during those summer holidays and now, a neuroscientist has explained why our perception of time gets quicker as we become adults, revealing that age and memory plays a major role.

Neuroscientist David Eagleman has explained that part of that feeling is down to our minds making us believe 'we're all living a little bit in the past' and that things 'going in slow motion is a trick of memory'.

Additionally, when we are children, we are constantly being introduced to new things and ideas that leave lasting impressions on our memories.

Advert

A neuroscientist has explained why time goes faster as you get older.
Pixabay

“You're figuring out the rules of the world, you're writing down a lot of memory, and so when you look back at the end of a year, you have a lot of memory of what you've learnt,” he said in a short 2019 BBC Scotland documentary.

“But when you're much older and you look back at the end of the year, you're probably doing approximately the same stuff you've been doing for the X number of previous years.

“And so, it seems like the year just went by in a flash.”

Advert

Eagleman suggested that what you need to do to feel as though you’ve lived longer is search for “novelty” in your day-to-day life - be it putting your watch on your other wrist or brushing your teeth with the opposite hand.

“Something this simple just forces the brain into a new mode where it can't predict exactly what's going to happen but instead has to be engaged,” he added.

“And what that means is when you go to bed at night time, you have a lot of footage to draw upon and it feels like your life is lasting longer.”

David Eagleman revealed that age and memory played a huge role in our perception of time.
Pixabay

Advert

Eagleman’s sentiments follow Santosh Kesari, MD, PHD, neurologist, neuro-oncologist, neuroscientist comments about how age and memory play a huge role in our retrospective perception of time, in other words remembered time rather then time in the present.

Speaking to NBC News in 2018, Kesari said: “Most [adults] feel that time elapsed slowly in their earlier days, but then speeds up later in life.

“For a 10-year-old, one year is 10 percent of their lives. For a 60-year-old, one year is less than two percent of their lives.

“We gauge time by memorable events and fewer new things occur as we age to remember, making it seem like childhood lasted longer.” The more you know eh?

Advert

If you have a story you want to tell, send it to UNILAD via [email protected] 

Featured Image Credit: Alamy

Topics: News, Science

Lisa McLoughlin
Lisa McLoughlin

Advert

Advert

Advert

  • Common daily supplement could stop your skin from aging as you get older
  • Scientist explains long-running theory on why Coke from McDonald's taste better
  • Conjoined twin Carmen Andrade announces marriage as sister Lupita explains why she ‘doesn’t want to get hitched’
  • The real reason why we yawn may have been discovered after scientists used bizarre experiment

Choose your content:

4 mins ago
29 mins ago
an hour ago
2 hours ago
  • Instagram/theradfordfamily
    4 mins ago

    Parents of 22 kids share rare insight into sex life with embarrassing confession

    Britain's biggest family were recently fined for a $70,000 Disney World vacation

    News
  • Getty stock
    29 mins ago

    People are using this everyday household item as lube but doctors advise against

    People are opting against using traditional lubricants like KY jelly for the bedroom, but doctors have warned against the move

    News
  • Pier Marco Tacca/WireImage
    an hour ago

    Wife of Ian Watkins' Lostprophets bandmate speaks out after pedophile rockstar's death

    The Lostprophets frontman died on Saturday

    News
  • Getty Images/Houston Chronicle/Hearst Newspapers
    2 hours ago

    Family of man found dead in same bayous as 15 other bodies speaks out as authorities update on serial killer fears

    Alexis Curry, whose brother Anthony was found in a bayou, is still looking for answers

    News