How Long Before Science Is Used to “Prove” That There Is “an Invisible Hand” in Economics!?
“Kinesthesis Can Make an Invisible Hand Visible” HERE by Kevin C. Dieter, Bo Hu,
David C. Knill, Randolph Blake, and Duje Tadin: (Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences,
University of Rochester; Center for Visual Science, University of Rochester;
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Seoul National University;
Vanderbilt Vision Research Center, Vanderbilt University; Department of
Psychological Sciences, Vanderbilt University; and Department of Ophthalmology,
University of Rochester School of Medicine)
In Psychological Science XX(X) 1–10 © The Author(s)
2013 Reprints and permissions: sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav DOI:
10.1177/0956797613497968 pss.sagepub.com
"Abstract"
“Self-generated
body movements have reliable visual consequences. This predictive association
between vision and action likely underlies modulatory effects of action on
visual processing. However, it is unknown whether actions can have generative
effects on visual perception. We asked whether, in total darkness,
self-generated body movements are sufficient to evoke normally concomitant
visual perceptions. Using a deceptive experimental design, we discovered that
waving one’s own hand in front of one’s covered eyes can cause visual
sensations of motion. Conjecturing that these visual sensations arise from
multisensory connectivity, we showed that grapheme-color synesthetes experience
substantially stronger kinesthesis-induced visual sensations than
nonsynesthetes do. Finally, we found that the perceived vividness of
kinesthesis-induced visual sensations predicted participants’ ability to
smoothly track self- generated hand movements with their eyes in darkness,
which indicates that these sensations function like typical retinally driven
visual sensations. Evidently, even in the complete absence of external visual
input, the brain predicts visual consequences of actions.”
Comment
I am only joking but ....!
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home