hidastajina
Hidastajina is a term used in discussions of perception and time processing to denote a proposed perceptual slowdown in which the brain's integration of sensory information expands, causing events to feel longer or slower than they objectively are. The concept is not tied to a single discipline, but appears in cognitive science, philosophy of time, and media studies as a metaphor or hypothesis about how attention and prediction shape temporal experience.
Origin and etymology: The word is a neologism; its exact roots are debated, but scholars generally treat
Characteristics: Hidastajina is described as subjective time dilation rather than an objective change in external events.
Applications and interpretation: In user experience design, hidastajina is invoked to explain why interfaces feel responsive
See also: Time perception, chronostasis, predictive coding, cognitive load, pacing in narrative.