Time Lag Between Thinking & Knowing?

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In summary, the conversation touched upon the concept of a time lag between when our brain thinks about something and when we consciously become aware of it. The idea originated from Benjamin Libet's research on volitional acts and whether we have free will. It suggests that our brain registers a percept and takes about half a second for us to become aware of it, but we retroactively backdate the event in order to utilize the information in real time. This concept has been debated for decades and is considered a famous issue in cognitive science. It also has implications for decision-making in various scenarios, such as reading, typing, and playing sports.
  • #1
aleemudasir
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Is there a time lag between the moment our brain thinks and the moment we actually know we're thinking. To elaborate and make it more clear let me put it like this:
Whenever we think, we feel like we 'hear' whatever we think, so is there a time lag between the actual moment when our brains thinks about something and the moment we kinda 'hear' it?
 
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  • #2
Sounds like you are referring to reflex action. The brain has a reflexive response to threats, but, this can be conditioned [e.g., military training].
 
  • #3
Not reflex actions, I am talking about common thinking process, like you're sitting and thinking about anything.
 
  • #4
aleemudasir said:
Is there a time lag between the moment our brain thinks and the moment we actually know we're thinking. To elaborate and make it more clear let me put it like this:
Whenever we think we feel like we 'hear' whatever we think, so is there a time lag between the actual moment when our brains thinks about something and the moment we kinda 'hear' it?

Your question is a little vague. If it could be rephrased as: "Is there a time lag between when we first hear something (that is, become aware of a sound) and when we recognize the sound based on our prior experience such as recognizing language or a particular voice?", there is, but it would normally be very short, some fraction of a second most likely. If the sound is unfamiliar it would likely take longer or perhaps not be recognized at all. The time lag would depend on our level of training/familiarity with the sound patterns we are hearing.
 
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  • #5
aleemudasir said:
Is there a time lag between the moment our brain thinks and the moment we actually know we're thinking. To elaborate and make it more clear let me put it like this:
Whenever we think we feel like we 'hear' whatever we think, so is there a time lag between the actual moment when our brains thinks about something and the moment we kinda 'hear' it?

This is a very famous issue in cog sci circles. The guy that kicked it off was Benjamin Libet. I refer you about 3 decades of debate in a variety of journals. Your question is actually more interesting than you might think. His idea is, get this, that your brain registers a percept, it takes on the order of a half second for you to become aware of it, but then you retroactively back date the event consciously in order to utilize the information "real time" in your current environmental circumstance. Sounds nuts, I know. But it's not crackpottery, he's the real deal, and commands the debate of the best neuroscientists still.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Libet
 
  • #6
SW VandeCarr said:
Your question is a little vague. If it could be rephrased as: "Is there a time lag between when we first hear something (that is, become aware of a sound) and when we recognize the sound based on our prior experience such as recognizing language or a particular voice?", there is, but it would normally be very short, some fraction of a second most likely. If the sound is unfamiliar it would likely take longer or perhaps not be recognized at all. The time lag would depend on our level of training/familiarity with the sound patterns we are hearing.

Actually my question is not about sound, please read it again.
 
  • #7
DiracPool said:
This is a very famous issue in cog sci circles. The guy that kicked it off was Benjamin Libet. I refer you about 3 decades of debate in a variety of journals. Your question is actually more interesting than you might think. His idea is, get this, that your brain registers a percept, it takes on the order of a half second for you to become aware of it, but then you retroactively back date the event consciously in order to utilize the information "real time" in your current environmental circumstance. Sounds nuts, I know. But it's not crackpottery, he's the real deal, and commands the debate of the best neuroscientists still.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Libet

Oh! So it's a famous issue, I was actually hesitant in asking this question, as I felt that the question will be downplayed immediately.
 
  • #8
aleemudasir said:
Actually my question is not about sound, please read it again.

OK. I misunderstood you. What DiracPool is referring to has to do with "volitional" acts and whether we in fact have free will. The idea is that the brain acts on a decision before we realize we made a decision. We apparently think we have made a choice when the brain has already begun implementing that choice. The time lag here involves the realization we have made a "choice". Most neuroscience workers do not believe there is such a thing as free will.
 
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  • #9
So if I am reading what is posted here I am retroactively backdating the words I see and the comprehension of their meaning to a certain time period so that it only appears to me to be in real time.

I can believe that when I focus my eyes on a certain word at different places on the screen, and I can "feel" the time lag from the focus to the comprehension of the word or icon, but 500ms for reading.

So now when I compose a verbose message, I am actually thinking 0.5 ms and typing 0.5ms in the past but I really do feel that I am typing now. Kind of crazy stuff.

Or for that matter being at bat in a game of baseball and making a decision to swing or not at a pitch. An approximate 90mph pitch will cross the home plate in 0.40 seconds.

So item #0 on Libet's experiment (repose) is when the pitcher throws.
To decide to swing at the pitch or not, I have to be consciously aware that the pitcher has thrown the ball, which would be item #1 - the readiness potential - 0.500 seconds before I swing. I note the position of the ball when I decide to swing -item #2 - 200 ms before I swing. I exercise my decision at 0ms - item #3.
Has the ball already crossed home plate when I swing but I can unconsciously backdate the swing and hit a home run?

Any experiments on a baseball hitter or other athletes, versus us regular folk on this neuro topic?
 
  • #10
I have to be consciously aware that the pitcher has thrown the ball
You do not have to. In addition, you see the motion of the pitcher in advance.

There is a similar situation in table tennis. Fast balls can be so quick that you have no way to react with your consciousness - but the reaction happens, and afterwards you notice that you moved your hand.
 
  • #11
256bits said:
So item #0 on Libet's experiment (repose) is when the pitcher throws.
To decide to swing at the pitch or not, I have to be consciously aware that the pitcher has thrown the ball?

I really haven't been following the debate since the late 90's, but from what I can remember, the antedating is used largely to bring parity between cause and effect in consciousness. The experiments show that you make the decision long before your cortex has a chance to process the data, but when that finally does happen, it back dates the event so that you think that you were making decisions in real time. Again, that's just me backdating what I think I knew of the subject to the 90's :confused:

Any experiments on a baseball hitter or other athletes, versus us regular folk on this neuro topic?

For some reason, Susan Pockett has taken up the cause to dissect this issue, and there's a history of the debate in one of the journals I referee for, Consciousness and Cognition. You may find some more updated info there. Although it's interesting, I haven't followed the debate in some time because I got burned out on it. But you can see from the back and forth that it arises a lot of passion in people, probably because it hits at the heart of free will. Check this link:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=pockett+libet

He also finally came out with a book called "mind-time" shortly before he passed.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/067401846X/?tag=pfamazon01-20
 
  • #12
mfb said:
You do not have to. In addition, you see the motion of the pitcher in advance.

There is a similar situation in table tennis. Fast balls can be so quick that you have no way to react with your consciousness - but the reaction happens, and afterwards you notice that you moved your hand.

OK. Thanks. I believe I now understand what Libet's experiment entails regarding the unconscious / conscious you. Took me a day and a half, just 15 minutes ago, but now I am not so sure it was me, or which parts of me... were debating the issue.

I often did wonder about how someone, and not just atheletes, such as a musician playing notes, a daty entry girl typing on a keypad, a singer keeping tune within a choir or the instrumental music, can do something very well, and do it so well without thinking about it that it takes on the appearance of being just a natural extension of a persons talents. If an individual ( well basically me a one person experiment ) attempts conscious thoughts about the task in which he/she is involved, it quickly becomes bogged down.
Very interesting.
 
  • #13
But you can see from the back and forth that it arises a lot of passion in people, probably because it hits at the heart of free will
I can well imagine.

At first, upon reading the Libet link, the half second 'delay' seemed much too excessive for a functioning human - well how can a person even walk without falling flat face after 2 steps. But it is what it is. A much too interesting a subject of which I know little about.
So, and thanks for the links, as start on investigation.
 
  • #14
Ages ago, I saw baseball great Willie Mays check his swing and then hit a home on a single pitch. The pitch was a "change up"; a slow speed pitch when a fast ball is expected. A fast ball may take only about 0.45 sec from the pitcher's hand to the catcher's mitt. The 0.5 sec figure for conscious perception of an action (then reset back) may well be an average for a variable. Superior athletes may have tighter conscious control of their actions although the general principle still applies. Of course Mays's eye-muscle coordination may have also been more refined at the subconscious level even for this extraordinary "double clutch".
 
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  • #15
I still don't see why reaction times are so important. Your brain can work within less than .5 seconds (with training), but you will only recognize it as conscious decision after the reaction.
 
  • #16
mfb said:
I still don't see why reaction times are so important. Your brain can work within less than .5 seconds (with training), but you will only recognize it as conscious decision after the reaction.

Possibly. The decision to check his swing could well have been initiated before awareness, but the decision swing again at the same pitch is not something that is at all common. I'm not sure that the studies cited indicate that all actions are initiated before one is conscious of the decision. I may not act on a conscious decision for seconds, minutes or even hours or days. I knew I was going to file for an extension for filing my income tax a month before I filed for an extension.
 
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  • #17
If you decide to do something "at some point in the future", you can be aware of that before that point in the future comes, sure. In general, if you have enough time, .5 seconds are not so interesting.

I think the interesting thing we can learn from the baseball/table tennis examples:
You can do decisions that look like conscious decisions, without being aware about that decision before you reacted.
 
  • #18
Ok, here's the deal. It's coming back to me in bits and pieces. There's a main principle in Libet's model that I forgot about, and that's the principle of the "veto." Libet's model is that essentially all actions are initiated involuntarily (withstanding filing for taxes). These involuntary actions or reactions to the current sensory/environmental circumstance are largely reflexive in nature and are initiated at the level of spinal cord reflexes all the way up to more evolved and learned action pattern sequences in the upper brain stem and limbic system. Action based on this subcortical sensory-motor hierarchy is relatively quick. Processing in the neocortex is much slower, and is also the last region of the forebrain to receive these sensory signals.

Looking at above, and looking at the experimental data, Libet cam up with the model that essentially all action is initiated involuntarily, and that the role of the cortical or conscious or "volitional" brain was to evaluate that reflexive initiative and either allow it to proceed or to "veto" that action. So, as a rough analogy, the decision to swing at a pitch would reflect the involuntary initiation of an action and the check swing would reflect the cortical evaluation of that initation as a bad decision. The execution of the veto is a top-down "volitional" phenomenon coming strait out of the cortex and influencing the fine coordination of the musculature through the cortico-spinal or pyrimidal motor tract. This would completely bypass the much slower route to muscular control that would have to move through the subcortical motor hierarchy.

Conversely, if the .5 second readiness potential agreed with the initial reflective action, the cortex would simply allow it to proceed and may, in fact, assist its operation through its top-down volitional control. So, in short, the cortical or volitional apparatus of the neocortex mainly serves as a guide or judge of the subcortical systems reactions to various stimuli. To keep its conscious world in order, however, it backdates that governance to make it seem as if the "self" is doing the initiating much of the time.
 
  • #19
aleemudasir said:
Is there a time lag between the moment our brain thinks and the moment we actually know we're thinking.
I'm not sure about this specific question. But there is definitely a lot of related research into brain activity, and how it relates to what the individual actually perceives is going on. For example:
http://www.nature.com/neuro/journal/v11/n5/abs/nn.2112.html
 

1. What is the time lag between thinking and knowing?

The time lag between thinking and knowing refers to the delay between when a person has a thought and when they become consciously aware of that thought. This delay can vary depending on individual factors and the complexity of the thought.

2. What causes the time lag between thinking and knowing?

The time lag between thinking and knowing is caused by the process of information traveling from the subconscious mind to the conscious mind. This process involves the activation of neural pathways and can be influenced by factors such as attention, emotion, and memory.

3. Can the time lag between thinking and knowing be reduced?

Yes, the time lag between thinking and knowing can be reduced through practices such as mindfulness and meditation. These practices can help improve the efficiency of the brain in processing information and reduce the delay between thinking and knowing.

4. How does the time lag between thinking and knowing affect decision making?

The time lag between thinking and knowing can have both positive and negative effects on decision making. It can allow for more thorough and rational decision making, but it can also lead to overthinking and indecisiveness. Understanding and managing this time lag can help in making more effective decisions.

5. Is the time lag between thinking and knowing consistent for everyone?

No, the time lag between thinking and knowing can vary for each individual and can also depend on the specific situation or thought at hand. Factors such as age, cognitive abilities, and mental health can also impact this time lag.

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