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Why does our brain invert the image received from our eyes? |
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| Dec19-10, 08:22 AM | #69 |
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Why does our brain invert the image received from our eyes?
In case nobody pointed that out before:
There is no need to invert the image! You only have to invert the image if there is an absolute reference system (within the brain) to which we need to correct the received image. Remember that the image in the brain is not a real image - it is a representation of an image, a package of information entangled in neuronal activity. The whole answer to inversion-problem is development: our brains are very plastic in the early years - they learn to understand some parts of the visual field as 'top' and some as 'bottom' due to gravity, reference to our body and learning to move and interact with environment. This understanding can be later remapped when sensorimotor contingencies change - like in the case of oculars that invert the image. But the image does not have to be changed anyway. To think that it has is similar to thinking that when you are playing a computer game and your character dies - there is an actual character dying somwhere inside the computer. |
| Dec20-10, 05:32 PM | #70 |
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First: There is an a absolute reference system for orientation, it's in the inner ear.
Second: It makes sense to flip the image because the image is upside down. Light comes into your eye at an angle that causes light coming from above you to hit the bottom side of the inside of your eye. It just makes more sense to view the world as it is. |
| Dec20-10, 08:36 PM | #71 |
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| Jun23-12, 11:11 PM | #72 |
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I realize this thread was began several years ago, but let me go on to point out a few details.
There's not really any guarantee that anyone's perception of "up and down" are equally proportionate. Perhaps left-handed, right-handed individuals—or those who are earthbound while those who dwell in the clouds—are inverted with respect to each other. I think a large portion of individuals perceive a heavier load with relation to the earth/physical form because the majority of their physical processes, sensations, and the earth itself are in that direction. It is entirely possible to reprogram your perception to give precedence to "upwards"; the images you receive have no "up or down". All is in relation to either the sky or the earth, for most creatures, because of the nature of the human form. However, if you think about it, really, your normal perception of adding precedence/importance can perceptually be inverted with continued practice. You have a full 360 degree range to play with—it's up to you to decide which angle your "heart"/spirit (or focus) resides. For most people they are in touch more with their physical heart, which happens to program much of their waking perceptions with relation to what language defines as "downward", or toward the earth/gravitational core. |
| Jul7-12, 08:15 PM | #73 |
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When they took off the glasses, they had to go through the same process all over again, as they then saw the world upside down again even though they were not wearing the glasses anymore. So I think the OP question does not really make sense. The brain does not 'flip' the image, it just associates directions however experience tells it they match up with it's visual perception. It is the same as when you wear red/blue 3d glassed to watch an old 3d movie. When you get out, if you were the glasses out into the lobby, you do not notice the colors anymore, but when you take the glasses off, everything will look red through the eye that had the blue filter over it, and everything will look blue through the eye that had the red filter over it. This can last for up to about 1/2 hour if I remember correctly. |
| Jul24-12, 04:27 PM | #74 |
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| Jul24-12, 09:13 PM | #75 |
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Read The Brain That Changes Itself http://www.amazon.ca/The-Brain-That-.../dp/0143113100 It's about neuro-plasticity. Many documented accounts from the medical profession about adults able to reprogram their brains after suffering some debilitating diseases or trauma. We can all do it, all the time. |
| Jul25-12, 02:00 PM | #76 |
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http://wexler.free.fr/library/files/...spectacles.pdf The world doesn't seem upside down when they take the glasses off, but there is a disorienting adjustment period because they've just spent a week learning to move in an upside down world. The notion the brain inverts the image in response to wearing the glasses for a while is very much called into question. |
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