Does Language Shape What We See?

At this very moment, your eyes and brain are performing an astounding series of coordinated operations.

Light rays from the screen are hitting your retina, the sheet of light-sensitive cells that lines the back wall of each of your eyes. Those cells, in turn, are converting light into electrical pulses that can be decoded by your brain.

The electrical messages travel down the optic nerve to your thalamus, a relay center for sensory information in the middle of the brain, and from the thalamus to the visual cortex at the back of your head. In the visual cortex, the message jumps from one layer of tissue to the next, allowing you to determine the shape and color and movement of the thing in your visual field. From there the neural signal heads to other brain areas, such as the frontal cortex, for yet more complex levels of association and interpretation. All of this means that in a matter of milliseconds, you know whether this particular combination of light rays is a moving object, say, or a familiar face, or a readable word.

That explanation is far too pat, of course. It makes it seem like the whole process of visual perception has been figured out, when in fact the way our mind sees and interprets reality is in large part a mystery. 

Read more at... 

Only Human, August 2013. 

Previous
Previous

Consciousness is a Process

Next
Next

New Resource Catalogs RNA-Binding Sites of Many Proteins