Chronostasis
Chronostasis is a perceptional time illusion in which the first moment after a saccadic eye movement is perceived as lasting longer than it actually does. The most familiar example occurs when looking at a clock; the moment you fixate after a saccade, the clock's subsequent tick may seem to linger. The term derives from Greek chronos time and stasis standing.
Mechanism: The effect is attributed to the brain's attempt to maintain a stable percept of the world
Experimental evidence: Chronostasis has been demonstrated in experiments using clock faces and ticking sounds. After a
Variants and scope: It is primarily a visual phenomenon and is most often discussed in the context
See also: time perception; saccadic suppression; stopped-clock illusion; perceptual continuity.