Our awareness of the perceptual world is shaped by spatial and temporal context.
Human perception has, for a long time, been investigated as if it were a collection of static photographs. As if the mind takes a picture, analyses it, puts it away, then takes the next, and then adds them together.
A new article in the high-impact journal Nature Review Psychology calls for a fundamental change in how we should think about perception and cognition — and how scientists should research these processes. The authors, Árni Kristjánsson, professor of psychology at the University of Iceland, and David Pascucci, assistant professor at the University of Lausanne, argue that perception is not a series of isolated snapshots, like individual photographs later arranged into sequence, but rather a continuous, interwoven process.
According to this approach, our internal model of the perceptual world does not involve individual snapshots, but a film — and our interpretation at each given moment depends on what we have seen and experienced before, as well as on our predictions about what will happen.
Surprising similarities to a song by Magnús Eiríksson
“In space and time, I trickle like a drop of water, in the murky river of all that is,” wrote the guitarist and songwriter Magnús Eiríksson on the band Mannakorn’s first album.
Of course, Magnús Eiríksson wasn’t writing about neuroscience, but he did describe the same fundamental position the scientists emphasise in their new research: We do not stand outside reality and measure it from there, but rather inside it. We are part of a flow we can never see in full.