Igor Vamos, associate professor of electronic media and culture jammer-- along with Andy Bichlbaum--has premiered their new movie, THE YES MEN. FIX THE WORLD and received media attention for holding a faux news conference on behalf of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
Read MoreThe Vision Revolution featured on Troy Night Out
The Vision Revolution featured on Troy Night Out
Date posted: Sep 14 2009 3:07PM
From the inside cover
A radically new perspective on human vision is emerging. Groundbreaking
research by evolutionary scientist and neurobiologist Mark Changizi is
driving a revolution in our understanding of human vision. In asking
why we see the way we do, Changizi overturns existing beliefs and
provides new answers to age-old questions. Why do our eyes face
forward? While binocular vision was helpful to our primate ancestors,
its importance for 3-D vision is exaggerated. Squirrels jump from
branch to branch just fine with sideways-facing eyes and many athletes,
including Hockey Hall of Famer Frank McGee, play with only one eye.
HINT: We evolved in a highly leafy environment. Why do we see in color,
when most other mammals do not? It's not because it helped our
ancestors find ripe fruit. Our color vision has evolved to be extremely
sensitive to specific sets of color changes. HINT: Primates with color
vision, like us, are the only ones who have areas of bare skin. Why do
we see optical illusions? It's not the result of glitches in our visual
system. Optical illusions can be traced back to the same specific
property of vision. HINT: We are able to catch a ball coming at us much
more effectively than we should given the speed at which our brains
process visual input. Why do we absorb information so readily by
reading? It's not because we've evolved to read; evolutionarily,
reading and writing are recent developments. HINT: Language is designed
to exploit skills we've refined over tens of millions of years. In The
Vision Revolution, Changizi details the conclusions of his innovative
fieldwork and their mind-blowing implications for our understanding not
just of human vision, but of the way we interact with the world in
which we live. You'll never see seeing the same way again.