How much are you conscious of right now? Are you conscious of just the words in the center of your visual field or all the words surrounding it? We tend to assume that our visual consciousness gives us a rich and detailed picture of the entire scene in front of us. The truth is very different, as our discovery of a visual illusion, published in Psychological Science, shows.
To illustrate how limited the information in our
visual field is, get a deck of playing cards. Pick a spot on the wall in front
of you and stare at it. Then take a card at random. Without looking at its
front, hold it far out to your left with a straight arm, until it’s on the very
edge of your visual field. Keep staring at the point on the wall and flip the
card round so it’s facing you.
Try to guess its colour. You will probably find it
extremely difficult. Now slowly move the card closer to the centre of your
vision, while keeping your arm straight. Pay close attention to the point at
which you can identify its colour.
It’s amazing how central the card needs to be before
you’re able to do this, let alone identify its suit or value. What this little
experiment shows is how undetailed (and often inaccurate) our conscious vision
is, especially outside the centre of our visual field.
Crowding: how the brain gets confused
Here is another example that brings us a little closer
to how these phenomena are investigated scientifically. Please focus your eyes
on the + sign on the left, and try to identify the letter on the right of it
(of course you know already what it is, but pretend for the moment that you do
not):
Illusion 1. TCUK, CC BY-SA
You might find this a bit tricky, but you can probably
still identify the letter as an “A”. But now focus your eyes on the following
+, and try to identify the letters on the right:
Illusion 2. TCUK, CC BY-SA
In this case, you’ll probably struggle to identify the
letters. It probably looks like a mess of features to you. Or maybe you feel
like you can see a jumble of curves and lines, without being able to say
precisely what’s there. This is called “crowding”. Our visual system sometimes
does OK at identifying objects in our peripheral vision, but when those objects
are placed near other objects, it struggles. This is a shocking limitation on
our conscious vision. The letters are clearly presented right in front of us.
But still our conscious mind gets confused.
Crowding is a hotly debated topic in philosophy, psychology and neuroscience. We’re still not sure why crowding happens. One popular theory is that
it’s a failure of what’s called “feature integration”. To understand feature integration, we will need to pick apart some of
the jobs that your visual system does.
Imagine you are looking at a blue square and a red
circle. Your visual system does not just have to detect the properties out
there (blueness, redness, circularity, squareness). It also has to work out
which property belongs to which object. This might not seem like a complicated
task to us. However, in the visual brain, this is no trivial matter.
It takes a lot of complicated computation to work out
that circularity and redness are properties of one object at the same location.
The visual system needs to “glue” together the circularity and the redness as
both belonging to the same object, and do the same with blueness and
squareness. This gluing process is feature integration.
New illusion
Recently, we have discovered a new visual illusion that
has raised a host of new questions for fans of crowding. We tested what happens
when three of the objects are identical, for example in the following case:
Illusion 3. TCUK, CC BY-SA
What do you see when you look at the +? We found that more than half of
people said that there were only two letters there, rather than three. Indeed,
follow-up work seems to indicate that they’re pretty confident about this
incorrect judgment.
This is a surprising result. Unlike normal crowding, it’s not that you see a
jumble of features. Rather, one whole letter neatly drops away from
consciousness. This result fits poorly with the feature integration theory.
It’s not that the visual system is detecting all of the properties out there,
but just getting confused about which properties belong to which objects.
Rather, one whole object has just disappeared.
We don’t think that a failure of feature integration
is what’s going on. Our theory is that this illusion is due to what we call
“redundancy masking”. In our view, the visual system can detect that there are
several of the same letter out there, but it doesn’t seem to calculate correctly
how many there are. Maybe it’s just not worth the energy to work out the number
of letters with high precision.
When we open our eyes, we effortlessly get a conscious
picture of our environment. However, the underlying processes that go into
creating this picture are anything but effortless. Illusions like
redundancy masking help us unpick how these processes work, and ultimately will
help us explain consciousness itself.
Source: https://theconversation.com/visual-illusion-that-may-help-explain-consciousness-new-study-151864
Source: Visual
Illusion That May Help Explain Consciousness – Scents of Science
(myfusimotors.com)
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