Science of the Spirit
The findings suggest that even though our peripheral vision is less accurate and detailed than what we see in the center of the visual field, we may not notice a qualitative difference because our visual processing system actually fills in some of what we "see" in the periphery.
"Our findings show that, under the right circumstances, a large part of the periphery may become a visual illusion," says psychology researcher Marte Otten from the University of Amsterdam, lead author on the new research.
"This effect seems to hold for many basic visual features, indicating that this 'filling in' is a general, and fundamental, perceptual mechanism."
As we go about daily life, we generally operate under the assumption that our perception of the world directly and accurately represents the outside world. But visual illusions of various kinds show us that this isn't always the case. As the brain processes incoming information about an external stimulus, we come to learn, it creates a representation of the outside world that can diverge from reality in noticeable ways.
Otten and colleagues wondered whether this same process might explain why we usually feel as though our peripheral vision is detailed and robust when it isn't.
"Perhaps our brain fills in what we see when the physical stimulus is not rich enough," she explains. "The brain represents peripheral vision with less detail, and these representations degrade faster than central vision. Therefore, we expected that peripheral vision should be very susceptible to illusory visual experiences, for many stimuli and large parts of the visual field."
Over a series of experiments, the researchers presented a total of 20 participants with a series of images. The participants focused on the center of the screen—a central image appeared and then a different peripheral image gradually faded in. Participants were supposed to click the mouse as soon as the difference between the central patch and the periphery disappeared and the entire screen appeared to be uniform.
Otten and colleagues changed the defining characteristic of the central image in different experiments, varying its shape, orientation, luminance, shade, or motion.
The results showed that all of these characteristics were vulnerable to a uniformity illusion—that is, participants incorrectly reported seeing a uniform image when the center and periphery were actually different.
The illusion was less likely to occur when the difference between the center and periphery was large; when the illusion did occur on these trials, it took longer to emerge.
Participants indicated that they felt roughly equally sure about their experience of uniformity when it actually did exist as when it was illusory. This suggests that the illusory experiences are similar to a visual experience based on a physical visual stimulus.
"The fun thing about this illusion is that you can to test this out for yourself," Otten says. "If you look up the illusion on http://www.uniformillusion.com you can find out just how real the illusory experience feels for you."
"The most surprising is that we found a new class of visual illusions with such a wide breadth, affecting many different types of stimuli and large parts of the visual field," Otten adds. "We hope to use this illusion as a tool to uncover why peripheral vision seems so rich and detailed, and more generally, to understand how the brain creates our visual perceptual experiences."
More information: M. Otten et al, The Uniformity Illusion: Central Stimuli Can Determine Peripheral Perception, Psychological Science (2016). DOI: 10.1177/0956797616672270
Journal reference: Psychological Science
Reader Comments
If one really wants to relax deeply one has to relax the eyes.
Outer and inner pictures come from the same space in the brain.
The eyes are the gateway to the soul? for sure they are the gateway to
the nervous system and the part of that we call brain.
The brain renders a neurally networked electrical image of modelled 'reality'
The focus creates the periphery - ie; what is not focused upon becomes sidelined or background.
An exclusive focus sets up a polarised filtering distortion - somewhat like 'zooming in' by masking out.
Identification or habitual association in exclusive focus maps pathways of reaction that make an 'automaton' of conditioned reaction.
The negative 'fulfilment' of such looping conscious routine persists until the relaxing of the directive allegiance to a fresh reality reflection-experience.
Reality is always fresh, new or timeless, and yet persistence in exclusive focusing idea generates experience in continuity of object-space through time. With our experience the coercive sense of control blocks the receptive that responds to the guiding direction of support for conscious creating - which in general human terms is conscious choice or rather, recognition and acceptance of resonant information.
Resting the mind and the focus operates an open net through which information is both received and extended. Everything we 'see' is an extension of idea. The framing of reality is a working model definition - not Reality itself.
If defining, predicting and controlling are accepted to be power or strength, then participance in and AS the richness of the Creative is ignored or denied and defined weak.
Power for its own sake is destructive to relational awareness and yet that Recognition opens the awakening to the true foundational movement of being - that the construct of consciousness operates as the denial of and secret or hidden dependence on.
Imaging-ation of Reality is Idea experience. The apparent split into fear and control, guilt and punishment, is resolved when control is recognized as fear-inducing, when effect is recognized as containing and masking its own cause.
The wish-insistence for an external and solid abiding 'reality' can translate to a grounded and tangibly felt support in a realm in which to learn by demonstration, and to wake to that learning as a more coherent reality participation.
The use of the eyes to scan a 'dead' world for data is deadening. Unless you extend a blessing - you will feel the denial or lack of blessing as your world and your reality. This is so readily demonstrable and yet so overlooked by the focus in the psychologically usurped idea of survival or persistence of a narrative identity.
Illusions or imagery envisioned can reflect true being - given and received as one, but focus within perception can redefine in terms of identity in image - and there's the conflicted incoherence. No image, symbol, concept or model of reality can ever Be anything else than 'of' reality - but the mind can respond as if Real - and give it reality at cost of true perspective.
Once perspective is lost - a fragmented focus operates as a separate 'whole' - in fragmented world it seeks to define, predict and control... in narrative identities that 'fill in' or mask out, as continuity manager for a private 'reality' of negative reinforcement.






something tells me Bernays already knew this.