How we see the world around us depends on our brain’s architecture
December 6th, 2010 - 12:07 pm ICT by ANILondon, Dec 6 (ANI): It’s a known idea that each of us perceives the world around us in a unique manner, and now a new study explains that this difference in perception depends on the size of the visual part of our brain.
The primary visual cortex - the area at the back of the brain responsible for processing what we see in the world around us - is known to differ in size by up to three times from one individual to the next.
Dr D Samuel Schwarzkopf, Chen Song and Professor Geraint Rees showed participants the Ebbinghaus illusion and the Ponzo illusion to show that individual volunteers saw the illusions differently.
Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), the researchers were also able to measure the surface area of the primary visual cortex in each volunteer.
They found a great deal of variability in the size of the primary visual cortex. There was a strong link between its size and the extent to which volunteers perceived the size illusion - the smaller the area, the more pronounced the visual illusion.
“Our work is the first to show that the size of part of a person’s brain can predict how they perceive their visual environment,” explained Schwarzkopf.
“Illusions such as the ones we used influence how big something looks; that is, they can trick us into believing that two identical objects have different sizes,” he said.
“We have shown that precisely how big something appears to you depends on the size of a brain area that is necessary for vision. How much your brain tricks you depends on how much ‘real estate’ your brain has put aside for visual processing.”
The study appears in the journal Nature Neuroscience. (ANI)
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Tags: brain area, ebbinghaus illusion, functional magnetic resonance, functional magnetic resonance imaging, geraint, illusions, journal nature, magnetic resonance imaging, nature neuroscience, perception, ponzo illusion, primary visual cortex, rees, schwarzkopf, surface area, three times, using functional magnetic resonance imaging, variability, visual environment, visual illusion