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Whenever I have a car or motorcycle crash, I experience the pre-impact part in slow motion. I understand this is a common phenomena.
There seemed to be no external strobe light that suddenly came on, so the effect must be due to the release of the brain's natural opiates or whatever.
How can
one turn this on suddenly at will so we can enjoy:
a) winning fights
b) catching balls, etc.
c) enjoying the moment a moment longer?
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As I understand it, this is the sort of thing that fighters (I'm thinking martial types) experience all the time. It would seem to be a product of training ones reflexes, among other things. |
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how do you see slower without lagging further and further behind'normal speed' vision?/unless your vision speeds up afterwards ,to compensate |
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huh. Yeah, adrenaline would also seem to have something to do with it. tb, that sort of is what happens; you see, it's a matter of perception. The apparent sl o w m o u s u allyseemstobefollowed by a flurry or blur, until 'normal' perception of time is regained. Funny that when remembering these things, you might be able to play them back excruciatingly slowly in your head, but at that moment of impact or what have you, things get fuzzy. |
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PeterSealy: one of each. Adrenaline may be the substance, but the experience is cool, relaxing and detached. |
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technobadger: i don't know, I think time slowed down. After impact, things even out, as the rough bit is fortunately all over quite quickly (milliseconds). |
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I think it must have something to do with some sort of sampling rate inside the brain. In a panic situation, our brain is going to want to take in as much information as possible to help it sort things out in a moment or two. Therefore it goes in to overdrive trying to process information, we can think more thoughts in a shorter time and therefore our timesense is messed up. |
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Actually, I've noticed this phenomenon nearly anytime something happens that doesn't conform to normal everyday goings-on. I think its just our brains trying to cope with new and possibly dangerous events. |
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now THAT is interesting, centauri! Perhaps it is that with a given, normal sample rate for each individual, said individual also has a normal loop length (or a number of them? say, 1sec, 10sec, 10min, etc?) for recording things into the brain in short-term memory. When the brain attempts to sample higher for more info in that short loop, it must start discarding information immediately thereafter in order to prevent an overflow error? I'm sure there's gotta be some real interesting stuff about this on the internet... |
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I don't think that the increased sample rate is for the purpose of sorting things out later, but instead giving you a better chance of surviving things *now*. Chances are that any physical traits we have that show themselves in emergencies were developed while we were still living in caves. The discussion group 'after' the mammoth stampede was probably secondary to our survival than getting out of the way in first place. |
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Hmm. Does this mean that we can all re-enact the Matrix? Because if it does, I have found my vocation in life. |
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bravo, steph! i'll help. and absterge and centauri, i think
you're on to something there. it'd give an extra
explanation for amnesia- the one being that your brain is
temporarily overloaded, and the other being your brain
has most likely just been knocked loose and chances are
you'll feel like your train of thought is flying off the
tracks. |
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//Whenever I have a car or motorcycle crash //
Thantox, I'm concerned. How often do you get to experience seeing in slow motion? And more importantly, how's the insurance payments? |
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TiVo. Thinking *your way*. |
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i thought this only happened in films. |
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I wonder if for autistic people time is experienced in slo-mo constantly. |
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I once read a (somewhat crappy) novel about a doctor who figured out how to alter his nervous system so that he experienced everything in 'slow motion' relative to everyone else because he had sped his own reaction timing up incredibly. Something about packet transmission across the synapses or some such. Of course, he quit being a doc and became a world champion athlete. It ended badly for him though because of some nasty side effect. |
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buggar, you completely spoilt the end of the film for me now. thanks a lot bris. |
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... I'll throw the ball and I want you to run way out ... past it. |
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Just need to reconfigure the IRQ interrupts in your brain, simply put vision as a lower priority. |
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Lowering the priority of vision processing would not produce slow motion but merely lower the number of samples per given timeframe. |
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