Muller Timothy, Nobre Anna C
Department of Experimental Psychology, Oxford Centre for Human Brain Activity, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2014 Oct;1326(1):60-71. doi: 10.1111/nyas.12545. Epub 2014 Sep 25.
Although the study of time has been central to physics and philosophy for millennia, questions of how time is represented in the brain and how this representation is related to time perception have only recently started to be addressed. Emerging evidence subtly yet profoundly challenges our intuitive notions of time over short scales, offering insight into the nature of the brain's representation of time. Numerous different models, specified at the neural level, of how the brain may keep track of time have been proposed. These models differ in various ways, such as whether time is represented by a centralized or distributed neural system, or whether there are neural systems dedicated to the problem of timing. This paper reviews the insight offered by behavioral experiments and how these experiments refute and guide some of the various models of the brain's representation of time.
尽管数千年来,时间的研究一直是物理学和哲学的核心,但时间在大脑中是如何被表征的,以及这种表征与时间感知是如何相关的问题,直到最近才开始得到解决。新出现的证据虽然微妙但却深刻地挑战了我们在短时间尺度上对时间的直观概念,为深入了解大脑对时间的表征本质提供了线索。关于大脑如何跟踪时间,已经提出了许多在神经层面上详细说明的不同模型。这些模型在各种方面存在差异,例如时间是由集中式还是分布式神经系统表征,或者是否存在专门用于计时问题的神经系统。本文回顾了行为实验所提供的见解,以及这些实验如何反驳并指导了大脑时间表征的各种模型。