The Vision Revolution: Eyes Are the Source of Human “Superpowers”
The Vision Revolution: How the
Latest Research Overturns Everything We Thought We Knew
About Human Vision, which hit store shelves this
month, is published by BenBella Books.
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New book challenges conventional wisdom on
why human vision, brains have evolved to perform extraordinary
feats
For Mark Changizi, it’s all in the eyes.
About half of the human brain is used for vision, and sight
is the best understood and most thoroughly investigated of the
five senses. This is why Changizi, a neurobiology expert and
assistant professor in the Department of Cognitive Science at
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, has spent the past several
years researching, writing, and challenging some of the most
basic scientific assumptions about human vision.
Reaching beyond “how,” and instead inquiring “why” vision
evolved as it has over millions of years, Changizi made a
startling discovery: human beings do, indeed, have superpowers.
And it turns out that these superpowers, all related to vision,
have been instrumental in shaping the way we interact with and
see the world.
The end result of Changizi’s eye-opening efforts is The
Vision Revolution: How the Latest Research Overturns Everything
We Thought We Knew About Human Vision. The new book, which
hit store shelves this month, is published by BenBella
Books.
“Our brains don’t come with user’s manuals listing all the
powers we’re capable of – much of what our eyes can do is still
not yet known,” Changizi said. “That’s why I think this is new,
important, exciting stuff, because we are still today learning
about powers we didn’t even know we have.”
Based on a series of peer-reviewed journal articles, The
Vision Revolution was carefully framed and tuned by
Changizi to be accessible and engaging to non-experts as well
as science aficionados and career neuroscientists. The new book
is a guided tour in which readers accompany Changizi as he
rolls up his sleeves and sets out to answer four misleadingly
simple questions: 1) Why do we see in color? 2) Why do our eyes
face forward? 3) Why do we see illusions? 4) Why does reading
come so naturally to us?
The short answers, surprisingly, are in the parlance of
Peter Parker and Clark Kent: 1) Because we are telepathic. 2)
Because we have X-ray vision. 3) Because we can see into the
future. 4) Because we can commune with the dead.
The longer answers, however, are more Charles Darwin than
comic books. For example, our X-ray vision is actually advanced
binocular vision that developed to allow our primate ancestors
to see the forest through a vast clutter of leaves and trees.
Our telepathy is actually our color vision, which evolved to
allow us to sense the emotions on the faces of others. And our
clairvoyance is actually an ages-old hack that enables our
minds to compensate for the one-tenth of a second lag between
when we see something and when the visual information is
received by our brain. (The very same delay, Changizi said, is
at the heart of most optical illusions.)
In The Vision Revolution, Changizi tackles his four
questions with a unique, interdisciplinary perspective. A
self-described “square, stick-in-the-mud, pencil-necked
scientist,” he employs humor, a sprinkling of pop culture
references, and intuitive everyday analogies to paint a rich
picture of leading-edge theoretical neuroscience and
evolutionary biology.
From asking readers to imagine themselves as somber
squirrels, to explaining why a uniocular, unibrowed cyclops of
legend would likely best today’s teens at violent video games,
The Vision Revolution explains with ease research that
in the last two years has landed Changizi in the pages of
Time, Newsweek, The New York
Times, and USA Today.
“In targeting the book toward non-experts as well as my
research peers, I believe it becomes more exciting for both
kinds of readers,” Changizi said. “Non-experts don’t want a
book written just for non-experts. They want to read a
book they know is genuinely part of the scientific
conversation. And experts don’t always need to have all the
enjoyment sucked out of their readings, as in most journal
articles.”
The research explored in The Vision Revolution was
funded in part by the U.S. National Institutes of
Health.
Prior to joining Rensselaer in 2007, Changizi was the
Sloan-Swartz Fellow in Theoretical Neurobiology at the
California Institute of Technology. His research spans
vision, cognitive science, and theoretical neurobiology, and
his first book, The Brain from 25,000 Feet: High Level
Explorations of Brain Complexity, Perception, Induction and
Vagueness, was published in 2003.
For more information on Changizi’s research, visit: http://www.changizi.com and
www.rpi.edu/dept/metasite/news/magazine/march2009/human_superpowers.html.
The BenBella Books press release for The Vision
Revolution can be found at:
http://www.benbellabooks.com/media/press_kits/Vision_Revolution_PressKit.pdf.
Rensselaer news releases on Changizi’s X-ray vision and
optical illusion research can be found at: http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2486
and http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2448.
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Published
June 16,
2009 |
Contact: Michael Mullaney
Phone: (518) 276-6161
E-mail: mullam@rpi.edu |
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