Wednesday 6 April 2011

Book Review: Sight Unseen (M.goodale, A. Milner) Part II:Doing without seeing

Now you will be surprised! You remember that Dee was unable to see the shape of things? Well, as it turns out, if you show her a pencil, she is unable to say what it is, let alone if it is held vertically or horizontally. However, ask her to grasp it and she will grasp it just like anybody else! With the same "on the fly" right orienting of her hand and with the same "on the fly" narrowing of her thumb - index distance! Just like if she could see it!


Just as surprising: She can walk around in a landscape full of obstacles without ever stumbling on any! She avoids them all like you and me!


The authors presented her a mailbox which opening was rotatable so as to enable orienting it in any chosen direction. When Dee was asked to hold an envelope and to rotate the envelope in such a way as to match with the opening of the mailbox: She failed lamentably. She seemed to orient her envelop randomly. But when asked to post the envelop through the slit: she succeeded easily, orienting correctly her hand just like you and me!


The authors asked her to grasp various objects while captors where posed at various parts of her hand so as to be able to analyze finely her moves. She grasps things in the exact same way as anybody else: adapting the orientation of her hand on the fly and adjusting the thumb-index distance to  the size of the object! Objects that she cannot "see" and which dimensions she is unable to guess!


As it turns out, Dee has the part of her vision controlling her actions intact but has the part of her vision constructing her perceptual representations damaged. She is living evidence that part of our vision driven actions are unconscious. We do not need to be aware of the orientation of a slit to be able to slide something in it. However, we do need to be aware of the orientation of said slit to be able to describe it!


We have many independent visually controlled processes in our brain. Many of them (grasping things, walking around avoid things, ...) still work even when, like Dee, we have lost the ability to consciously see these things!


In my next post, you will see how some people have the exact opposite problem than Dee.

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