Study Says Eyes Evolved for X-Ray Vision
Most animals have sideways-facing eyes
that allow for a panoramic view of nearly all that’s
around them, both in front and behind.

The eyes of some mammals have evolved to
point in the same direction. While animals with forward
facing eyes lose the ability to see what’s behind them,
they gain X-ray vision, which makes it possible for them
to see through the clutter in the world.
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Forward-facing eyes allow animals to “see through”
the clutter in the world
The advantage of using two eyes to see the world around us
has long been associated solely with our capacity to see in
3-D. Now, a new study from a scientist at Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute has uncovered a truly eye-opening
advantage to binocular vision: our ability to see through
things.
Most animals — fish, insects, reptiles, birds, rabbits, and
horses, for example — exist in non-cluttered environments like
fields or plains, and they have eyes located on either side of
their head. These sideways-facing eyes allow an animal to see
in front of and behind itself, an ability also known as
panoramic vision.
Humans and other large mammals — primates and large
carnivores like tigers, for example — exist in cluttered
environments like forests or jungles, and their eyes have
evolved to point in the same direction. While animals with
forward-facing eyes lose the ability to see what’s behind them,
they gain X-ray vision, according to Mark Changizi, assistant
professor of cognitive science at Rensselaer, who says eyes
facing the same direction have been selected for maximizing our
ability to see in leafy environments like forests.
All animals have a binocular region — parts of the world
that both eyes can see simultaneously — which allows for X-ray
vision and grows as eyes become more forward facing.
Demonstrating our X-ray ability is fairly simple: hold a pen
vertically and look at something far beyond it. If you first
close one eye, and then the other, you’ll see that in each case
the pen blocks your view. If you open both eyes, however, you
can see through the pen to the world behind it.
To demonstrate how our eyes allow us to see through clutter,
hold up all of your fingers in random directions, and note how
much of the world you can see beyond them when only one eye is
open compared to both. You miss out on a lot with only one eye
open, but can see nearly everything behind the clutter with
both.
“Our binocular region is a kind of ‘spotlight’ shining
through the clutter, allowing us to visually sweep out a
cluttered region to recognize the objects beyond it,” says
Changizi, who is principal investigator on the project. “As
long as the separation between our eyes is wider than the width
of the objects causing clutter — as is the case with our
fingers, or would be the case with the leaves in the forest —
then we can tend to see through it.”
To identify which animals have this impressive power,
Changizi studied 319 species across 17 mammalian orders and
discovered that eye position depends on two variables: the
clutter, or lack thereof in an animal’s environment, and the
animal’s body size relative to the objects creating the
clutter.
Changizi discovered that animals in non-cluttered
environments — which he described as either “non-leafy
surroundings, or surroundings where the cluttering objects are
bigger in size than the separation between the animal’s eyes”
(think a tiny mouse trying to see through 6-inch wide leaves in
the forest) — tended to have sideways-facing eyes.
“Animals outside of leafy environments do not have to deal
with clutter no matter how big or small they are, so there is
never any X-ray advantage to forward-facing eyes for them,”
says Changizi. “Because binocular vision does not help them see
any better than monocular vision, they are able to survey a
much greater region with sideways-facing eyes.”
However, in cluttered environments — which Changizi defined
as leafy surroundings where the cluttering objects are smaller
than the separation between an animal’s eyes — animals tend to
have a wide field of binocular vision, and thus forward-facing
eyes, in order to see past leaf walls.
“This X-ray vision makes it possible for animals with
forward-facing eyes to visually survey a much greater region
around themselves than sideways-facing eyes would allow,” says
Changizi. “Additionally, the larger the animal in a cluttered
environment, the more forward facing its eyes will be to allow
for the greatest X-ray vision possible, in order to aid in
hunting, running from predators, and maneuvering through dense
forest or jungle.”
Changizi says human eyes have evolved to be forward facing,
but that we now live in a non-cluttered environment where we
might actually benefit more from sideways-facing eyes.
“In today’s world, humans have more in common visually with
tiny mice in a forest than with a large animal in the jungle.
We aren’t faced with a great deal of small clutter, and the
things that do clutter our visual field — cars and skyscrapers
— are much wider than the separation between our eyes, so we
can’t use our X-ray power to see through them,” Changizi says.
“If we froze ourselves today and woke up a million years from
now, it’s possible that it might be difficult for us to look
the new human population in the eye, because by then they might
be facing sideways.”
Changizi’s research was completed in collaboration with
Shinsuke Shimojo at the California Institute of Technology, and
published online in the Journal of Theoretical
Biology. It was funded by the National Institutes of
Health.
Changizi’s X-ray vision research, along with his research
about our
future-seeing powers, color telepathy, and eye
computation abilities, will appear in his book The
Vision Revolution (BenBella Books), due out in stores this
spring.
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Published
August 28,
2008 |
Contact: Amber Cleveland
Phone: (518) 276-2146
E-mail: clevea@rpi.edu |
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