Time and the Brain: The illusion of Now

in time •  7 years ago 

How does the brain generate a coherent stream of visual awareness, when different visual features are processed separately in different places in the brain and at different times? And how does it generate the illusion that we live in the present, whereas the neural processes underlying visual perception necessarily take time – thereby incurring delays that are long enough that we should notice them? These are some of the questions that his research seeks to address.

Hinze Hogendoorn is an assistant professor at the department of Experimental Psychology (Faculty of Social Sciences) at Utrecht University. His research interests lie in the temporal aspects of perception, particularly vision.

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If you're interested in Hinze Hogendoorn you might find this video of mine worth a view. It's a set of ideas also related to the mind and time. It's a theory concerning the original meaning of an ancient Chinese symbolic system. I'd love to know what you think of it: https://steemit.com/philosophy/@taijireality/wkhmozec