Scottish Daily Mail

Why time appears to go faster... when we blink

- Mail Foreign Service

BLINK and you really will miss it, a study suggests.

It found our perception of time speeds up when we blink our eyes.

Mark Wexler, a vision researcher at Paris Descartes University, conducted two experiment­s that shed new light on blinking.

In the first, test subjects were asked to blink as the lights were turned off in a room. The researcher­s then turned the lights on again a few millisecon­ds after the participan­ts opened their eyes.

Each subject was asked how long they thought the darkness had lasted.

In the second experiment, the subjects blinked while looking at an image of a square that quickly flashed up on a screen.

Mr Wexler said the results showed the participan­ts miscalcula­ted the passage of time while blinking, thinking it ran two to four times faster than it really did.

He added: ‘You can turn off the lights in the room for the same duration of a blink – a 15th of a second – while your eyes are open. It will seem very violent and very jarring.

‘This is what happens every couple of seconds in our waking lives – we also turn off the lights because we shut our eyelids – but we don’t have this jarring perception of our eyes being turned off. ‘The question is how does the brain go about filtering out these blinks that happen all the time.’

He said the research suggested the effect was less disturbing when blinking because of the time ‘distortion’.

Mr Wexler added it was waking up after sleeping ‘and it feels like it’s been a few seconds but actually it’s been eight hours’.

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