▲ | fourthark 3 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||
> A study asked different age groups to mentally count 120 seconds. People under 30 averaged 115 seconds; those over 50 just 87. That's a 24% reduction in perceived time. This seems bogus to me. I’m 51; I set a timer on my phone for 2 minutes, put it aside and counted to about 128 before it went off. Why would your ability to count seconds change over time? A second has always felt a little slow to me, probably because my resting pulse is above 60. (I think it’s also ambiguously described? Maybe they meant the opposite, in which case it took me about 114 seconds to count to 120.) | ||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | hn_throwaway_99 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||
> This seems bogus to me. There is a quote from the show Ted Lasso which I love: "Be curious, not judgemental". Rather than proudly declare that "this seems bogus", I think it's more productive to ask why your perceived experience may not match with the study. FWIW it only took a few seconds of googling to find the study in question, likely much less time than it took you to write your comment, and then you're free to examine the methods and outcomes of that study: | ||||||||||||||||||||
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