Thursday, June 11, 2009
It's rare when real-world events
perfectly mirror experiments that scientists are conducting.
That's why
neuroscientists at the University of Washington were delighted at the reactions
of former President George W. Bush and Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki
when an Iraqi reporter flung his shoes toward the two men during a Baghdad news
conference.
When Bush ducked and Maliki didn't flinch as the first shoe
sailed toward them, it was a real-world example supporting the theory that there
are two independent pathways in the human visual system.
"The original
idea proposed is that one system guides your actions and the other guides your
perception. The interesting part is the 'action' system allows the brain to
'see' things your eyes do not perceive," said Jeffrey Lin, a UW psychology
doctoral student and lead author of a paper appearing June 11 in the journal
Current Biology. Co-authors are Scott Murray and Geoffrey Boynton, UW psychology
assistant and associate professors, respectively.
"When we throw two
balls at you with very similar trajectories, they may look the same to your
perceptual system, but your brain can automatically calculate which one is more
threatening and trigger a dodging motion before you've even realized what has
happened," said Lin.
"If you look at the shoe-throwing video you will
see that the prime minister doesn't flinch at all. His brain has already
categorized the shoe as non-threatening which does not require evasive action.
But Bush's brain has categorized the shoe as threatening and triggers an evasive
dodge, all within a fraction of a second."
To explore how this dual
visual system works, the researchers set up several experiments that were
similar to what baseball players experience when they step into the batter's box
and get ready for the pitcher to throw the ball. In a split second their action
system determines if the ball is going to hit their body and whether to initiate
a defensive bail out of the batter's box.
Instead of baseballs, college
students participating in three experiments looked at a computer monitor and
were instructed to quickly locate a target oval among a field of circular discs,
determine its path and press a key when they had found the oval. The key
manipulation in the study was that some of the trials began with a looming
stimulus at the position of the target oval. When this looming motion was on a
collision path with a student's head, the participant responded faster to the
target than when the looming motion just missed the head. The experiment showed
that a stimulus on a collision path with a student captured attention but one on
a near-miss path did not. Critically, subjects could not differentiate between
the subtly different collision and near-miss looming stimuli in a separate
experiment.
The authors strongly believe the research supports the idea
that the human visual system is composed of two independent systems.
"A
major focus of neuroscience is understanding how we deal with sensory
information," said Boynton. "There is no way the brain can possibly process and
analyze everything we are exposed to. We have to select what is important. In
the real world you are on your own and what you pay attention to is part of
survival. This experiment shows that threatening stimuli grab your attention,
even those we can't consciously identify. That this is more accurate than our
conscious perception is pretty amazing."
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University of
Washington
Thanks to University of Washington for this article.