Thinking Of The Past Or Future Causes Us To Sway Backward Or Forward
Main Category: Psychology / PsychiatryArticle Date: 23 Jan 2010 - 0:00 PDT
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Although we can't technically travel through time (yet), when we think of the past or the future we engage in a sort of mental time travel. This uniquely human ability to psychologically travel through time arguably sets us apart from other species. Researchers have recently looked at how mental time travel is represented in the sensorimotor systems that regulate human movement. It turns out our perceptions of space and time are tightly coupled.
University of Aberdeen psychological scientists Lynden Miles, Louise Nind and Neil Macrae conducted a study to measure this in the lab. They fitted participants with a motion sensor while they imagined either future or past events. The researchers found that thinking about past or future events can literally move us: Engaging in mental time travel (a.k.a. chronesthesia) resulted in physical movements corresponding to the metaphorical direction of time. Those who thought of the past swayed backward while those who thought of the future moved forward.
These findings reported online in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, suggest that chronesthesia may be grounded in processes that link spatial and temporal metaphors (e.g., future= forward, past= backward) to our systems of perception and action. "The embodiment of time and space yields an overt behavioral marker of an otherwise invisible mental operation," explains Miles and colleagues.
Source: Catherine Allen-West
Association for Psychological Science
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MLA
23 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/176843.php>
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/176843.php.
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (1)
A Homer Simpson Moment
posted by anonymous on 29 Jan 2010 at 6:39 pmSome things that are so common that we don't normally notice them. It is easy to pay attention to dramatic or novel events, and we tend to celebrate these while ignoring everyday things that are "beneath our notice." Body metaphors abound in our language and have real physiological and behavioral manifestations. For instance, the phrase "grit your teeth" is an indicator of an ongoing stress that one is powerless to change - a situation that can result in excessive muscle tension in the jaw and a TMJ problem. Body metaphors enable us to communicate many situations clearly and concisely. Literally acting them out is a fun kind of therapy. I love it that this finding is so obvious that I wonder why I never thought of it before. "Doh!"
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