Researchers at Karolinska
Institutet in Sweden have discovered a fundamental mechanism that affects the
size of the pupil, namely our breathing. The study, published in The Journal of
Physiology, shows that the pupil is smallest during inhalation and largest
during exhalation – something that could affect our vision.
Like the aperture in a camera, the pupil
controls how much light reaches the eye. It is therefore fundamental to our
vision and how we perceive our surroundings. Three mechanisms that can change
the size of the pupil have been known for over a century: the amount of light,
focus distance and cognitive factors such as emotion or mental effort.
Now scientists have discovered a fourth:
breathing. The pupil is smallest around inhalation onset and largest during
exhalation.
“This mechanism is unique in that it is
cyclical, ever-present and requires no external stimulus,” explains Artin Arshamian, associate professor at the Department of
Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska
Institutet, who led the research. “Since breathing affects brain activity and
cognitive functions, the discovery may contribute to a better understanding of
how our vision and attention are regulated.”
The researchers conducted five
experiments with over 200 participants, examining how breathing affects pupil
size under different conditions.
The results showed that the effect
persisted whether participants breathed quickly or slowly, through their nose
or mouth, if lighting conditions or fixation distance varied, if they were
resting or performing visual tasks. The difference in pupil size between
inhalation and exhalation was large enough to theoretically affect vision.
The study also showed that the function
is intact in people born without the olfactory bulb, a brain structure that is
activated by nasal breathing. This suggests that the mechanism is controlled by
the brainstem, a fundamental and evolutionarily conserved part of the brain.
Investigates
how vision is affected
The researchers are now investigating
whether changes in pupil size during breathing also affect vision. Previous
research shows that smaller pupils make it easier to see details, while larger
pupils help us find hard-to-see objects.
“Our results suggest that our vision may
switch between optimising for distinguishing small details when we inhale and
detecting faint objects when we exhale, all within a single breathing cycle,”
says Martin Schaefer, a postdoctoral researcher at the same department at
Karolinska Institutet and the study’s first author.
There may also be clinical applications,
according to the researchers.
“One potential application is new
methods to diagnose or treat neurological conditions such as Parkinson’s
disease, where damage to pupil function is an early sign of the disease,” says
Artin Arshamian. “This is something we want to explore in the future.”
Source: https://news.ki.se/breathing-and-vision-may-be-linked
Journal article: https://physoc.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1113/JP287205
Source: Breathing and vision may be linked – Scents of Science
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