Exploring the Space-Time Continuum…in the Mind

We often use words related to space to talk about time, describing the order of events in terms of “moving forward,” “looking back,” “thinking ahead,” and “lagging behind.” In fact, research suggests that people typically think about events on a timeline that right from left (past) to right (future).

But is the ability to mentally represent space necessary for representing events on a mental timeline?

Researcher Lera Boroditsky and colleagues decided to investigate this question by looking at mental representation of time in participants who had suffered strokes to the right hemisphere of the brain.

Importantly, the strokes led some of the participants to show signs of spatial neglect, a “severe disturbance in the ability to detect, identify, and move toward objects or events in the [left] side of space.”

Participants were shown pictures of different foods that a fictional man named David liked to eat – each picture indicated whether the food was something David liked to eat 10 years ago or something he will like to eat in 10 years.

Participants who showed left-hemispatial neglect were able to recall and identify fewer stimuli relating to the past than did healthy patients and stroke patients without neglect. Furthermore, they were not able to correctly recall or identify as many “past” items as belonging to the past.

They were not significantly worse, however, at recalling or recognizing “future” items.

Together, the findings indicate that patients with left hemispatial neglect have relative difficulty representing past events, those we would typically imagine as falling on the left side of a mental time line.

“Our results suggest that an intact ability to represent space is necessary for accurate temporal representation,” the researchers write. “They demonstrate that a distortion in spatial representation (i.e., unilateral neglect symptoms) predicts a distortion in the way memorized events are represented along the mental time line.”

In combination with other work that has shown other temporal deficits in patients with left hemispatial neglect – such as impaired processing of temporal dynamics and difficulty directing attention in time – the data “converge to suggest that some neural substrates (e.g., in posterior parietal cortical areas) are shared for the representation of external spatial information and the representation of temporal information.”

ResearchBlogging.org
Saj, A., Fuhrman, O., Vuilleumier, P., & Boroditsky, L. (2013). Patients with left spatial neglect also neglect the “left side” of time. Psychological Science. DOI: 10.1177/0956797612475222

Comments

In my opinion Einstein’s STC exists only in mind – not really. STC is similar to a ghost. Just as we can not sense ghost we can not sense space and time also. So if physicists are believing in Einstein’s STC then they have to believe in ghost also. Either they should believe in both or they should not believe in both.


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