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    • Reaction time

      It Feels Instantaneous, But How Long Does It Really Take to ...
      • Many scientists consider the best proxy measure of the speed or efficiency of thought processes to be reaction time - the time from the onset of a specific signal to the moment an action is initiated. Indeed, researchers interested in assessing how fast information travels through the nervous system have used reaction time since the mid-1800s.
      www.sciencealert.com/it-feels-instantaneous-but-how-long-does-it-really-take-to-think-a-thought
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  2. Sep 17, 2015 · Many scientists consider the best proxy measure of the speed or efficiency of thought processes to be reaction time - the time from the onset of a specific signal to the moment an action is initiated.

  3. Explore the fascinating science behind the speed of thought and its impact on human cognition with BBC Science Focus Magazine.

  4. Dec 16, 2009 · Using a fast code helps speed up thought, but to a large extent the brain—like a telegraph network—really depends on efficient pathways. Impulses from the retinas, for instance, have to travel up the optic nerve to the thalamus, which relays the signals to the visual cortex in the back of the brain.

  5. Jul 1, 2015 · Many scientists consider the best proxy measure of the speed or efficiency of thought processes to be reaction time – the time from the onset of a specific signal to the moment an action is...

  6. Dec 1, 1994 · The ‘speed of thought’ may be measured in a number of ways by researchers working in different disciplines, such as cognitive psychologists or neuropsychologists. Only the neurophysiologist, however, is able to go to the heart of the matter — the speed of the response of neurons.

    • Martin J. Tovée
    • 1994
  7. We'll explore how fast our brains can create thoughts, respond to things we see or hear, and handle the huge amount of information we come across every day. Let's dig into the science of how fast we think and learn about the amazing abilities of our brains.

  8. Dec 20, 2016 · Human thought takes time to form, and so the “right now” that we’re experiencing inside our skulls is always a little later than what’s going on in the outside world. It takes 500 milliseconds, or half a second, for sensory information from the outside world to be incorporated into conscious experience.

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