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'''Visual temporal integration''' is a perceptual process of integrating a continuous, and rapid stream of information into discrete perceptual episodes or ‘events’. Arguably, integrating over small temporal windows, as opposed to sampling ‘snapshots’, allows the brain to evaluate visual information more reliably.<ref name="StanneyHale2014">{{cite book|author1=Kay Stanney|author2=Kelly S. Hale|title=Advances in Cognitive Engineering and Neuroergonomics|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6oVYBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA141|date=19 July 2014|publisher=Independent Publisher|isbn=978-1-4951-2101-2|pages=141–}}</ref> VTI by the brain reflects an important property of the world: the closer in time two pieces of information occur, the more likely it is that they will be part of the same ‘event’. Several other factors determine the brain’s integration window.<ref>
One way in which scientists are studying visual temporal integration is by investigating the differences experienced by people with unusual ways of perceiving the world, for example through schizophrenia
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