What happens between our perception intervals?

In summary, we can't observe an object's movement at every single position it passes through during its trajectory, just like we can't measure time in miliseconds or nanonseconds using our perception. However, there are tools available that can measure shorter time intervals.
  • #1
DarkFalz
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As far as i understand, we (our mind) observe the universe at set periods of time, say, our consciousness activates each 0.5 seconds for instance.

This means that we have no perception whatsoever of what happens between the 0.5 seconds that exist between our perceptions.This led me to the question: can we be 100% sure that, for instance, when we see a body B moving from point 1 to point 2, it actually moved across a straight line? Or could some very strong force have moved it backwards behind point 1 at some instant, and then some other even stronger force moved the body to point 2? In the end, we would still believe that the object took a straight path, but we have no way to know!

Is there some law in physics that invalidates this? Otherwise we couldn't be 100% sure when we make statements like "John was here (America for instance) with me during the last 10 minutes, so he couldn't be in China 5 minutes ago as you said". Since John could indeed have been in China between our perception instants.



Thanks in advance
 
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  • #2
DarkFalz said:
As far as i understand, we (our mind) observe the universe at set periods of time, say, our consciousness activates each 0.5 seconds for instance.
Where did you see this? I've never heard of such a thing.

(You use the words "consciousness" and "perception". You understand, don't you, that the are not the same thing?)
 
  • #3
Perhaps got the idea from our brains "switching off" input from the eyes when we change where we are lookin until the eyeballs have stopped moving.
 
  • #4
That is not what i mean. I mean that we can't observe a given object's movement at every single position it passes through during its trajectory, just like i can't measure time in miliseconds or nanonseconds using my perception.
 
  • #5
We have plenty of instruments that can resolve shorter time intervals than the naked eye can.
 
  • #6
DarkFalz said:
That is not what i mean. I mean that we can't observe a given object's movement at every single position it passes through during its trajectory, just like i can't measure time in miliseconds or nanonseconds using my perception.

Probably, but 1/2 second is can't be the lower limit. If it were, our perception would always be as though everything were illuminated by a strobe light. Movies and TV have to run at something like 24 frames / second minimum, otherwise THEY look to us like they were shot under a strobe light.

Where on Earth did you hear anything so silly as 1/2 second? Given your own experience in day to day life, how can you possibly believe it?
 
  • #7
DarkFalz said:
As far as i understand, we (our mind) observe the universe at set periods of time, say, our consciousness activates each 0.5 seconds for instance.

That's not how it works, although what's actually going on is at least as strange and interesting. If you want to explore this topic further, you could try reading Daniel Dennett's book "Consciousl Explained" - the title promises a bit more than the book delivers, but it's a good start.
 
  • #8
Thank you for all the answers so far. Please do not emphasize the 0.5 period of time for our time perception, it was just a "shot in the dark". My main question in this topic is how do we guarantee, or if there is something in physics that assures to us that an object moving from X to Y passes through every single point between X and Y and does not go back at any moment.

I mean, if something caused the body to move backwards very fast, and then put it back in place with fast speed also, our human eye would not perceive it, we would still see that the object moved from X to Y even if it actually went from X to Z, Z to W and then from W to Y, really fast, without us perceiving it.

Kinda like if person P1 looks at person P2 at t=0 seconds, then P1 perceives person P2 again at t=0.5 seconds, what guarantees that no really fast story occurred between these two time intervals? We could not perceive it! We're "blind" during these 0.5 seconds and even if the whole story of the universe occurred, really fast, during these 0.5 seconds and then restored the conditions we would excect to see, we wouldn't perceive it.
 
  • #9
There exists a family of instruments called Digital Delays, one use of which is in sound reinforcement and effects. In designing such products, naturally they needed to calculate just how short of a delay a human can detect. Not only is it not 0.5 seconds, it is many orders of magnitude shorter, closer to 0.0000025 seconds. This is in discreet pulse instrumentation/events. In analogue signals, transients far shorter can be detected, sometimes by longer term effects, but also all but instantaneously assuming the source is very close, as in headphones.

So the first thing you need to do is follow your own advice and stop falling back on 0.5 seconds. Stop thinking in terms of tenths, hundredths, thousandths, ten thousandths, or even hundred thousandths of seconds as units of perception time. It's just wrong and by a lot. Our brains are not digital.
 
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  • #10
I understand that there is a delay between a stimulus - like seeing the second hand of a clock changing position (once a second - not a continuously moving sweep hand) - and being aware of it. It is quite common to glance at a clock and to think it has stopped because it seems to take longer than one second before it moves,on the first occasion. This may be at the root of what DarkFalz is referring to. The way we perceive things is a very complicated process. The reason is that our quirky brains make us think that we have a complete picture of what we are looking at and the whole of the mental model they are constantly building of the world around us cannot be updated real time. However, the updating is not at a regular rate and depends upon what part of a scene is getting our particular attention at anyone time - it's not like a cine film, passing through at 18 frames per second.
 
  • #11
DarkFalz said:
My main question in this topic is how do we guarantee, or if there is something in physics that assures to us that an object moving from X to Y passes through every single point between X and Y and does not go back at any moment.
There is a philosophical question lurking there. If you can't measure it, how do you know it's true?

Classically we model time and space as being continuous and objects as always having precise positions in space that vary continuously as functions of time. Experiment is (or was) consistent with that model down levels of accuracy much better than we can achieve with the naked eye. But ultimately, it is just a model. One can never have 100% assurance that a model is accurate in realms where there is not yet experimental confirmation.

In the realm of the very fast and the very small it turns out that quantum mechanical effects intrude. There are fundamental limitations on our ability to measure position and time accurately. We even have experimental evidence of particles existing here and then existing there without having traversed the space between. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_tunnelling

But this has nothing to do with a 0.5 second lag in human perceptions (as estimated with reaction time measurements).
 
  • #12
jbriggs444 said:
There is a philosophical question lurking there. If you can't measure it, how do you know it's true?

Classically we model time and space as being continuous and objects as always having precise positions in space that vary continuously as functions of time. Experiment is (or was) consistent with that model down levels of accuracy much better than we can achieve with the naked eye. But ultimately, it is just a model. One can never have 100% assurance that a model is accurate in realms where there is not yet experimental confirmation.

In the realm of the very fast and the very small it turns out that quantum mechanical effects intrude. There are fundamental limitations on our ability to measure position and time accurately. We even have experimental evidence of particles existing here and then existing there without having traversed the space between. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_tunnelling

But this has nothing to do with a 0.5 second lag in human perceptions (as estimated with reaction time measurements).

I agree that there might be a philosophical question in here, namely our "blindness" during the time interval of our perceptions. I ask this because, let's assume that for instance, two persons are talking to one another and one says "John must have come here and hit my car 5 minutes ago", and the other person argues on defense of John "no it couldn't have been him, i was with him 5 minutes ago". This argument assumes that if John was with the second person, the second person perceived him during the entirety of time, and John is still a human, so he couldn't in principle, move at "lightspeed" to fool the second person.

Still, what i ask is if there is something in physics that disproves completely that this could happen, that very strong forces could fool our perception by causing events to happen inbetween our perceptions.
 
  • #13
So we have gone from 0.5 seconds to 5.0 minutes now? The holes in our perception are extremely small for the events on the plane in which we exist. That's why they evolved as they did and also why QM is rarely intuitive to us.

This however is beginning to sound like "If a tree falls in the forest with nobody near, does it make a sound?"

The world isn't "built around us". All evidence supports that we sprung from the world and no forces have, as part of their "raison d'etre" confounding humans, even though Murphy might disagree :) .
 

Related to What happens between our perception intervals?

1. What is the relationship between perception intervals and our brain?

Perception intervals refer to the time it takes for our brain to process and interpret incoming sensory information. Our brain plays a crucial role in this process, as it receives and filters the sensory data before creating our perception of the world.

2. How do our perception intervals affect our perception of time?

Our perception intervals can affect our perception of time by altering how quickly or slowly we perceive events. For example, when we are engaged in a stimulating activity, time may seem to pass by quickly, while during periods of boredom, time may seem to move slowly.

3. Can our perception intervals be altered?

Yes, our perception intervals can be altered. Our brain is constantly adapting and learning, and as we gain new experiences and information, our perception intervals can change. Additionally, certain factors such as stress, fatigue, and drugs can also impact our perception intervals.

4. How do different senses contribute to our perception intervals?

Each of our senses (vision, hearing, taste, smell, and touch) has its own perception interval, which can vary in duration. For example, our visual perception interval is typically shorter than our auditory perception interval, which is why we can process visual information faster than auditory information.

5. Are perception intervals the same for everyone?

No, perception intervals can vary from person to person. Factors such as age, genetics, and past experiences can influence the length and efficiency of our perception intervals. Additionally, individuals with certain neurological conditions may have altered perception intervals.

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