Brain research: How we predict the immediate future

A boxer’s brain anticipates how his opponent will act.

A study authored by neuroscientists from the Ernst Strüngmann Institute of the Max Planck Society, Goethe University Frankfurt, the Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, and New York University, explains how the human brain predicts the timing of future events: The brain continuously estimates how likely something is to happen within the next three seconds and uses this estimate to prepare fast and accurate reactions.

Humans respond to environments that change at many different speeds. A video game player, for example, reacts to on-screen events unfolding within hundreds of milliseconds or over several seconds. A boxer anticipates an opponent’s moves – even when their timing differs from that of previous opponents. In each case, the brain predicts when events occur, prepares for what comes next and flexibly adapts to the demands of the situation.

Publikation: Matthias Grabenhorst, David Poeppel, Georgios Michalareas: The anticipation of imminent events is time-scale invariant. PNAS (2026) https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2518982123

Source and further information (ESI)

Relevante Artikel

Öffentliche Veranstaltungen

Wissenschaft im Zukunftsfeld Sport

Die Goethe-Universität und die Eintracht Frankfurt Fußball AG wollen stärker zusammenarbeiten und haben dazu eine Kooperationserklärung unterzeichnet. Geplant sind unter

Uni Gym am Sportcampus eröffnet

Ab dem 04. Mai neue Fitness-Flatrate inklusive viel mehr Trainingszeiten buchbar. Lange ersehnt und endlich auch für alle buchbar: Zum

You cannot copy content of this page