[blindza] Fw: How do blind people picture reality?

  • From: "Jacob Kruger" <jacob@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "NAPSA Blind" <blind@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2012 07:11:56 +0200

----- Original Message ----- How do blind people picture reality?


By Natalie Wolchover, Life's Little Mysteries Staff Writer.
Date: 04 October 2012.

Paul Gabias has never seen a table. He was born prematurely and went blind
shortly thereafter, most likely because of overexposure to oxygen in his
incubator. And yet, Gabias, 60, has no trouble perceiving the table next to him. "My image of the table is exactly the same as a table," he said. "It has height, depth, width, texture; I can picture the whole thing all at once. It just has no
color."

If you have trouble constructing a mental picture of a table that has no color — not even black or white — that's probably because you're blinded by your ability
to see. Sighted people visualize the surrounding world by detecting borders
between areas rich in different wavelengths of light, which we see as different
colors. Gabias, like many blind people, builds pictures using his sense of
touch, and by listening to the echoes of clicks of his tongue and taps of his cane as these sounds bounce off objects in his surroundings, a technique called
echolocation.

"There's plenty of imagery that goes on all the time in blind people," he told
Life's Little Mysteries. "It just isn't visual."

As well as being blind himself, Gabias is an associate professor of psychology at the University of British Columbia who conducts research on perceptual and cognitive aspects of blindness. His personal and professional experience leads him to believe that the brains of blind people work around the lack of visual information, and find other ways to achieve the same, vitally important result:
a detailed 3D map of space.

The brain region neuroscientists normally think of as the "visual" cortex,
rather than being left to languish, plays a key role in the blind's mental
mapping process. [Do Colorblind People Dream In Color?]

In sighted people, visual information first goes to the visual cortex, which is located in the occipital lobe at the back of the brain. From there, it goes to
the parietal lobe, sometimes referred to as the "where system" because it
generates awareness of a sensed object's location. Next, the information is
routed to the temporal lobe, also known as the "what system" because it
identifies the object.

Evidence from recent brain-imaging experiments indicates that blind people's
brains harness this same neural circuitry. "When blind people read Braille using touch, the sensory data is being sent to and processed in the visual cortex," said Morton Heller, a psychologist who studies spatial cognition and blindness at Eastern Illinois University. "Using touch, they get a sense of space" — and the relative locations of the raised dots that form Braille letters — "that's
not visual, it's just spatial."

For blind people who are adept at echolocation, sound information routes through
the visual cortex as well. Their brains use echoes to generate spatial maps,
which are sometimes so detailed that they enable mountain biking, playing
basketball and safely exploring new environments. In fact, last year, Canadian
researchers discovered that even when blind echolocation experts listened to
audio recordings of their tongue clicks echoing off different objects, they
could easily identify the objects that had been present at the time of the
recordings. Scans with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) showed
activity in areas of their brains associated with visual processing. In other
words, their brain scans resembled those of a sighted person identifying an
object in a photo.

Clearly, detecting visual contrasts is only one method of many for perceiving reality. But when trying to imagine a world perceived using hearing or touch, one tends to automatically picture echoes and textures generating a visual image built out of contrasts between light and dark. Gabias cannot conceive of light
and dark. So what, exactly, are his mental images like?

"I just picture tables. We have no idea what our brain is doing. We just
perceive — that's the wonderful thing about it. This is all 'psychologization' that has made it complicated to explain, but simple to do. You don't know how
you perceive. You just do it," he said.

"If you know that blind people know where to put their plates on their table, and you know that blind people deal with tables in the exactly the same way you do, then you presume that they imagine them in the same way you do. You have got
to presume that what's inside their head is like yours."

Source URL:
http://www.livescience.com/23709-blind-people-picture-reality.html
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