You can start a stopwatch and then stop it when you think you've reached ten seconds, then compare perceived to elapsed. And do a few trials with different times if you're feeling scientific.
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Replying to @preinfarction
Lost time means distracted attention though, so how much you choose to focus on the task can change your clock rate a bit.
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ms time perception stays amazing like clockwork, yeah. Seconds percepton changes with things like attention, arousal, and administration of stimulants. Hourly and daily perception is down to environmental cues, appetite, circadian clock (suprachiasmatic nucleus) & its friends
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Replying to @preinfarction
Now I want to see an experiment where an isolated person has to stop a stopwatch after a percieved year has elapsed
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What if the perceived length of a year is about how many novel things happen to you, and any test of yearly chronoperception just comes back with results like "Yeah, you've really let yourself stagnate, honey".
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