Understanding Time Awareness Development

A growing body of research is bringing new attention to how children experience and process time differently. Dr. Russell Barkley, a retired clinical neuropsychologist at the University of Massachusetts who coined the term “temporal myopia” in 1997, has spent decades studying how the brain’s frontal lobes – the area responsible for executive function – play a critical role in time perception. According to experts, what appears as chronic lateness or difficulty starting tasks often reflects underlying time awareness skills that are still developing.

“I just don’t seem to have that clock that ticks by in my head,” explained Alice Lovatt, a musician and group-home worker in Liverpool who has experienced these challenges firsthand. Her observation reflects what many children and adults describe: an internal sense of time that works differently than those around them.

The phenomenon goes beyond simply being late. It encompasses the ability to estimate how long a task will take, sense how much time has passed, and conceptualize future deadlines. For children developing these executive function skills, these challenges can affect everything from homework completion to morning routines.