Abstract
The nature of the relationship between the timing of neural activity (brain time) and the perceived timing of the events represented by that activity (event time) has long been a matter of debate among philosophers. It is tempting to assume a direct relationship between neuronal-onset latencies and corresponding perceptual latencies. However, the perceived timing of a change from stimulus A to stimulus B could, in principle, be based on either the offset of the response to stimulus A or the onset of the response to stimulus B – if indeed there is any direct relationship between brain time and event time at all.
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