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The Tentative Hypothesis

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Suggest Lutein and connection to Haidinger's brush. ... all know the capabilities of mantis shrimp and other interesting sea creatures, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Tentative Hypothesis


1
The Tentative Hypothesis
  • There is more to polarization vision in humans
    than has previously been thought.
  • or
  • The human visual system extracts useful and
    useable information from the polarization
    properties of objects.

2
Haidingers Brush
3
Explanation
  • Dichroism of the macular pigment lutein

4
Motivators
  • Blue polarization filters attenuate epileptic
    seizures. (Kepecs, 2004)
  • They dont know why. Suggest Lutein and
    connection to Haidingers brush.
  • We speculate that cross-polarized lenses may
    attenuate the PPR by inducing binocularly
    disparate patterns of retinal activation that
    result in altered patterns of cortical activation
    in the early but not, ordinarily, later stages of
    visual processing, and that these alterations
    render the stimulus less epileptogenic.

5
An assumption
  • Polarized light is not processed separately or on
    a different channel. But it doesnt need to be in
    order to be used.
  • In some butterflies (Papilio aegeu) horizontal
    polarized green is differentially allowed to pass
    through its optical filter.

6
Polarization Vision in Invertebrates
  • We all know the capabilities of mantis shrimp and
    other interesting sea creatures, who use
    polarized light to get about given varying
    underwater lighting conditions.
  • As it turns out, nearly all marine animals which
    live near the surface have some sensitivity to
    polarized light. They use the refracted
    celestial polarization pattern, which is highly
    correlated with the sun position, for
    navigational tasks. (Sabbah et al., 2006)
  • But what about life above the waters surface?

7
Polarization vision in insects and vertebrates
  • Ants and some other insects seem to use the
    polarized skylight for navigational purposes
    (Wehner 1997)
  • Salamander and other lizards respond to polarized
    light and can be trained to perform tasks with
    polarized stimuli (Taylor Alder, 1973)
  • Many species of birds are sensitive to polarized
    light, and use the skylight polarization
    information for migration and orientation
    purposes (Munro Wiltschko, 1995)
  • It is a generally accepted fact that mammals
    (including humans, of course) are insensitive to
    polarized light.
  • But, is it really that simple?...

8
  • How much useful polarization information could
    there be?
  • Probably more than you would expect.

9
False Colour Polarization of Rainforest Leaves
10
How might mammals use polarization information?
  • Polarization information seems useful in
    distinguishing figure from ground, even when
    color and luminance are fairly constant.
  • This could be helpful when foraging,
    discriminating shadows, or looking for the ripest
    berries in the bush, which may have different
    polarization distribution, but nearly identical
    color and luminance.
  • In desert regions, polarization is the only way
    to tell a mirage from a real water source at
    distance. (Gabor Horvath, Jozsef Gal, 1997)

11
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12
So, can humans use this information?
  • Given that we may have some contrast sensitivity
    to polarization after all, is it possible for
    humans to use this information, even though we
    have no phenomenological experience of
    polarization itself?
  • Is the information simply confounded with color
    and luminance, or can it be used in low level
    cortical processes?
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