Why Can’t We Walk in a Straight Line?

Posted by Miss Cellania in Science & Tech, Video Clips on January 9, 2011 at 5:48 pm


(vimeo link)

If we don’t have visual cues to guide us, people tend to walk in circles. Many theories have been put forth for why this is so, but experiments that control for variables such as right-handedness, brain-side dominance, and more strength on one side come up with the same results: we tend to go in circles. Read more about it at NPR. Link -via Metafilter

 
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How the Brain Learns to See

Posted by Miss Cellania in Science & Tech on September 18, 2009 at 10:41 am

Normally, babies learn how to look at the world before they can communicate their experiences. The rare cases of people who have been blind all their lives and then had their sight restored offer scientists a unique opportunity to study how we learn to interpret visual signals. MIT professor Pawan Sinha is studying children and adolescents in India who are seeing the world for the first time after treatment for blindness.

MIT neuroscientists asked patients who had recently had their sight restored to identify and trace the shapes they saw. While a normally sighted person would likely trace two overlapping squares, these patients interpreted the drawing as three separate shapes.

Research so far suggests that seeing moving objects is crucial for learning to interpret visual signals in the three-dimensional world. Link -via Digg

(image credit: Sinha Laboratory/MIT)

 
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