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The Vision Revolution: How the Latest Research Overturns Everything We Thought We Knew About Human Vision Paperback – June 8, 2010
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Changizi focuses on four why” questions:
1. Why do we see in color?
2. Why do our eyes face forward?
3. Why do we see illusions?
4. Why does reading come so naturally to us?
The Vision Revolution explores phenomena such as cyclopses, peeking and many more you hadn’t even thought to wonder about. Changizi shows how deeply involved these evolutionary aspects of our vision are in why we see the way we doand what the future holds for us.
The Vision Revolution is a book that finally gives attention to what before has been largely neglected by other works on human visiona book that looks at the why.”
- Print length240 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBenBella Books
- Publication dateJune 8, 2010
- Dimensions6 x 0.5 x 9 inches
- ISBN-109781935251767
- ISBN-13978-1935251767
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Customers find the book highly compelling and perfect for anybody curious about vision. They also appreciate the well-done figures.
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Customers find the book highly compelling, enjoyable to read, and enjoyable to look at. They say the information content is excellent and provides an interesting perspective on the evolution of vision. They also say it's perfect for anybody curious about vision and comes enthusiastically recommended.
"...Changizi presents a highly compelling, evolutionarily grounded case for four intriguing ideas, distills the related focus areas into readable prose,..." Read more
"lots of important new ideas here make this definitely worth reading...." Read more
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"...This book was enjoyable to read with all of the experiments and optical illusions that allow the reader to actively participate while reading; all..." Read more
Customers find the figures in the book very well done and interesting. They also say the first section about color is extremely interesting.
"...and those solutions stand up quite well because the studies were well and elegantly designed and done...." Read more
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Intriguing riddles such as these often necessitate interdisciplinary brilliance to solve. Theoretical biologist and neuroscientist Mark Changizi has been stockpiling research in these areas for much of the last decade, fixated on some of the fascinating but imperfectly understood precincts of human perception. Not content with asking how our central nervous system functions, Changizi is determined to provide explanations of why its architecture and inter-operative functionality exist as they do. The Vision Revolution, should it withstand the scrutiny of peer review, is a groundbreaking work in vision science that brings forward original research into the evolution of the human visual system.
In the book he pivots between four core ideas, each of which are given mystical titles:
(1) Color telepathy: "Color vision was selected for so that we might see emotions and other states on the skin."
(2) X-ray vision: "Forward-facing eyes were selected for so we could use X-ray vision in cluttered environments."
(3) Future-seeing: "Optical illusions are a consequence of the future-seeing power selected for so that we might perceive the present."
(4) Spirit-reading: "Letters culturally evolved into shapes that look like things in nature because nature is what we have evolved to be good at seeing."
Each entrée of this technical collation is truly mind-altering, and it is a joy to tag along as Mark architects the empirical struts of his developmental theses. Let's dive right in.
Color Vision
His first course of business is to provide an alternate explanation of the origin of color vision in primates. While we take it for granted today, color sensing is a relatively recent adaptation in the mammalian order. Until now, the default view among vision scientists is that color was selected for to distinguish between various types of fruit and leaves. The regnant explanation has survival value on its side, but Changizi believes it is not the complete answer. After all, not all mammalian diets are alike, but our color sensors and attendant properties are strikingly continuous with other color-sensitive primates.
Changizi instead makes the case that color acuity evolved to detect changes in skin oxygenation. When blood and oxygen levels fluctuate, we see an instant feedback effect on our skin. These shifts in skin tone and color signal us to changes in mood and emotion states and, more importantly, alert us to physiological dysfunction. A mother who can sense the full range of hue, saturation and brightness deviations in her baby's face and body is in a better position to detect when something is amiss and take proper action.
This hypothesis puzzles out well enough for bare-skinned animals like humans, but what about hairy primates - the ancestors which supposedly evolved these traits long before our debut? It turns out there is a neatly correlated distribution between color vision and bare-faced primates. Changizi surveys the animal kingdom and finds that primates lacking color vision have furry faces, while those with hairless spots on their faces and body tend to have color vision just like us. He notes that this more "fleshed-out" explanation (pun intended) does not swear mutual exclusivity with the dominant explanation; indeed, they could be co-occurring drivers of selection.
X-ray Vision
Have you ever wondered why we have forward-facing eyes, as opposed to sideways-facing eyes like most reptiles, birds and fish? As Changizi demonstrates, this element of our physiology was selected for to better suit the habitat in which our ancestors evolved. This might at first seem like a non-intuitive proposition, as surely our survival would be better served by the ability to see both in front of and behind us (as animals with sideways-facing eyes most certainly can). But there's a more marvelous, some might say superhuman reason our current orientation was favored.
Close one of your eyes. Notice how your nose is suddenly visible. The result is the same when you close your other eye. With both eyes open, however, the portion of your visual field occupied by your nose is no longer blocked. You are, effectively, able to see through your nose. Remarkably, this trick can be reproduced with any object whose width is narrower than the width of your eyes. Hold up your hand, position it vertically in front of your face, and you can see through it to read the screen behind it.
According to Changizi, this ability was helpful in leafy habitats, enabling our predecessors to see through grass and other foliage to spot predators and food. As life transitioned from water to land, those acclimatizing to heavily verdant environments gradually evolved the optical design shared by humans today. The binocular region for animals with sideways-facing eyes, on the other hand, is far too narrow to be effective, explaining why this arrangement is less commonly found in lush surrounds. While we may be manifestly less dependent on this feature today, it is nonetheless fascinating that evolution has gifted us with a passive form of X-ray vision.
Optical Illusions (and why they trick us)
As we move into the book's third unit, we listen in as Changizi disassembles the aura of visual illusions. It's estimated that eyes first evolved around 500 million years ago. Why then, after all this time, aren't our eyes and brains complex enough to avoid being fooled by simple visual tomfoolery? Shouldn't we process these images correctly by now?
The answer lies in the communication protocols linking our optical and brain arrays. The deep relationships governing the brain and the eye help us function appropriately in a three-dimensional world. The architecture of our central nervous system is such that a gap of 1/10th of a second exists between the moment light first hits our photoreceptors and when that signal is processed by the brain. Our brain then compensates for this delay by projecting images 1/10th of a second into the future.
These premonitions aid us in catching a thrown ball, for example, but can trick our senses when viewing static imagery on a two-dimensional plane. In effect, our in-built neural lag causes us to intuit motion-like characteristics to inert images. Alas, our future-seeing ability is too favorable to our survival to ever part with, so the minor bug of awkwardly processing 2D geometry will remain an acceptable trade-off.
Nature's Alphabet
"Spirit-reading" is Changizi's nimble way of referring to all of the knowledge, thoughts and ideas nesting in the world's books, literature and other written material. Thanks to language and writing, we have the ability to peer into the minds of our ancestors. And what an uncanny ability it is! Written language is not a technology we could have guaranteed would mesh well with our biology. So how did it come about? And why was it such a glowing success?
Changizi seeks to explain the contagion of written communication by linking its design to the shapes and contours found in our natural environment. If the basic strokes, junctions, marks and symbols of writing were adapted from familiar objects in nature, then our streamlined visual system would be well-prepared to process this information effectively. In fact, if we rewind the clock to our most ancient writing systems, we find they are unmistakably logographic (object-like), including Sumerian cuneiform (the very first writing system ever developed organically ~3200 BCE), Egyptian hieroglyphs, Chinese characters, and the independently derived writing of the Mexican Indians appearing sometime before 600 BCE.
Through some involved visual linguistic analysis, Changizi submits that the fundamental structures of letters are akin to object parts observed in nature. The more common configurations we find in nature tend to find prevalence in human writing schemes. This relationship was no accident; our ancestors mimicked natural scenery to optimize information retrieval through the instrument of writing. In this sense, the clues to writing's triumph are lurking in the letters themselves.
Closing Thoughts
There should be more books like The Vision Revolution. Changizi presents a highly compelling, evolutionarily grounded case for four intriguing ideas, distills the related focus areas into readable prose, and tailors it to the nonspecialist. The abundance of visual aids is a thrilling, effective way to convey his ideas and goes a long way toward making this more engaging than the average non-fiction work. The Vision Revolution is concise, well-argued, easy to wade through, and comes enthusiastically recommended. These ideas will change the way we think about vision and our perception of the world, and I hope it spawns even more exciting research going forward.
Reviewed in the United States on November 9, 2013
Intriguing riddles such as these often necessitate interdisciplinary brilliance to solve. Theoretical biologist and neuroscientist Mark Changizi has been stockpiling research in these areas for much of the last decade, fixated on some of the fascinating but imperfectly understood precincts of human perception. Not content with asking how our central nervous system functions, Changizi is determined to provide explanations of why its architecture and inter-operative functionality exist as they do. The Vision Revolution, should it withstand the scrutiny of peer review, is a groundbreaking work in vision science that brings forward original research into the evolution of the human visual system.
In the book he pivots between four core ideas, each of which are given mystical titles:
(1) Color telepathy: "Color vision was selected for so that we might see emotions and other states on the skin."
(2) X-ray vision: "Forward-facing eyes were selected for so we could use X-ray vision in cluttered environments."
(3) Future-seeing: "Optical illusions are a consequence of the future-seeing power selected for so that we might perceive the present."
(4) Spirit-reading: "Letters culturally evolved into shapes that look like things in nature because nature is what we have evolved to be good at seeing."
Each entrée of this technical collation is truly mind-altering, and it is a joy to tag along as Mark architects the empirical struts of his developmental theses. Let's dive right in.
Color Vision
His first course of business is to provide an alternate explanation of the origin of color vision in primates. While we take it for granted today, color sensing is a relatively recent adaptation in the mammalian order. Until now, the default view among vision scientists is that color was selected for to distinguish between various types of fruit and leaves. The regnant explanation has survival value on its side, but Changizi believes it is not the complete answer. After all, not all mammalian diets are alike, but our color sensors and attendant properties are strikingly continuous with other color-sensitive primates.
Changizi instead makes the case that color acuity evolved to detect changes in skin oxygenation. When blood and oxygen levels fluctuate, we see an instant feedback effect on our skin. These shifts in skin tone and color signal us to changes in mood and emotion states and, more importantly, alert us to physiological dysfunction. A mother who can sense the full range of hue, saturation and brightness deviations in her baby's face and body is in a better position to detect when something is amiss and take proper action.
This hypothesis puzzles out well enough for bare-skinned animals like humans, but what about hairy primates - the ancestors which supposedly evolved these traits long before our debut? It turns out there is a neatly correlated distribution between color vision and bare-faced primates. Changizi surveys the animal kingdom and finds that primates lacking color vision have furry faces, while those with hairless spots on their faces and body tend to have color vision just like us. He notes that this more "fleshed-out" explanation (pun intended) does not swear mutual exclusivity with the dominant explanation; indeed, they could be co-occurring drivers of selection.
X-ray Vision
Have you ever wondered why we have forward-facing eyes, as opposed to sideways-facing eyes like most reptiles, birds and fish? As Changizi demonstrates, this element of our physiology was selected for to better suit the habitat in which our ancestors evolved. This might at first seem like a non-intuitive proposition, as surely our survival would be better served by the ability to see both in front of and behind us (as animals with sideways-facing eyes most certainly can). But there's a more marvelous, some might say superhuman reason our current orientation was favored.
Close one of your eyes. Notice how your nose is suddenly visible. The result is the same when you close your other eye. With both eyes open, however, the portion of your visual field occupied by your nose is no longer blocked. You are, effectively, able to see through your nose. Remarkably, this trick can be reproduced with any object whose width is narrower than the width of your eyes. Hold up your hand, position it vertically in front of your face, and you can see through it to read the screen behind it.
According to Changizi, this ability was helpful in leafy habitats, enabling our predecessors to see through grass and other foliage to spot predators and food. As life transitioned from water to land, those acclimatizing to heavily verdant environments gradually evolved the optical design shared by humans today. The binocular region for animals with sideways-facing eyes, on the other hand, is far too narrow to be effective, explaining why this arrangement is less commonly found in lush surrounds. While we may be manifestly less dependent on this feature today, it is nonetheless fascinating that evolution has gifted us with a passive form of X-ray vision.
Optical Illusions (and why they trick us)
As we move into the book's third unit, we listen in as Changizi disassembles the aura of visual illusions. It's estimated that eyes first evolved around 500 million years ago. Why then, after all this time, aren't our eyes and brains complex enough to avoid being fooled by simple visual tomfoolery? Shouldn't we process these images correctly by now?
The answer lies in the communication protocols linking our optical and brain arrays. The deep relationships governing the brain and the eye help us function appropriately in a three-dimensional world. The architecture of our central nervous system is such that a gap of 1/10th of a second exists between the moment light first hits our photoreceptors and when that signal is processed by the brain. Our brain then compensates for this delay by projecting images 1/10th of a second into the future.
These premonitions aid us in catching a thrown ball, for example, but can trick our senses when viewing static imagery on a two-dimensional plane. In effect, our in-built neural lag causes us to intuit motion-like characteristics to inert images. Alas, our future-seeing ability is too favorable to our survival to ever part with, so the minor bug of awkwardly processing 2D geometry will remain an acceptable trade-off.
Nature's Alphabet
"Spirit-reading" is Changizi's nimble way of referring to all of the knowledge, thoughts and ideas nesting in the world's books, literature and other written material. Thanks to language and writing, we have the ability to peer into the minds of our ancestors. And what an uncanny ability it is! Written language is not a technology we could have guaranteed would mesh well with our biology. So how did it come about? And why was it such a glowing success?
Changizi seeks to explain the contagion of written communication by linking its design to the shapes and contours found in our natural environment. If the basic strokes, junctions, marks and symbols of writing were adapted from familiar objects in nature, then our streamlined visual system would be well-prepared to process this information effectively. In fact, if we rewind the clock to our most ancient writing systems, we find they are unmistakably logographic (object-like), including Sumerian cuneiform (the very first writing system ever developed organically ~3200 BCE), Egyptian hieroglyphs, Chinese characters, and the independently derived writing of the Mexican Indians appearing sometime before 600 BCE.
Through some involved visual linguistic analysis, Changizi submits that the fundamental structures of letters are akin to object parts observed in nature. The more common configurations we find in nature tend to find prevalence in human writing schemes. This relationship was no accident; our ancestors mimicked natural scenery to optimize information retrieval through the instrument of writing. In this sense, the clues to writing's triumph are lurking in the letters themselves.
Closing Thoughts
There should be more books like The Vision Revolution. Changizi presents a highly compelling, evolutionarily grounded case for four intriguing ideas, distills the related focus areas into readable prose, and tailors it to the nonspecialist. The abundance of visual aids is a thrilling, effective way to convey his ideas and goes a long way toward making this more engaging than the average non-fiction work. The Vision Revolution is concise, well-argued, easy to wade through, and comes enthusiastically recommended. These ideas will change the way we think about vision and our perception of the world, and I hope it spawns even more exciting research going forward.
i think the section on illusions and perception of the future alone is probably reason enough to buy this book.
I think the book is worthwhile for anyone interested in stereovision.
Top reviews from other countries
The standard approach of the Author is to propose an idea (usually in "I think..." form) and then to search for facts and evidence to support it.
But what about evidence that contradicts his theories? They are conveniently swept under the rug.
Now I do concede that the book's first chapter about why our cones have developed sensitivity to specific frequencies are validly supported, and that there could be truth in this, but what ruins the Author's credibility are endless cases where the facts are clearly wrong or badly supported.
One of these "threads" where things get pretty bad is when the Author tries to convince the reader that mankind has lost its fur for "color signaling". To me, his line of reasoning sounds absurd (p.28): "Skin that is bare -not skin of any particular color- is what we expect to see in primates with color vision, and that's what we find. Bare skin, then, is for color signaling".
This is an example of "cargo cult science" (google it): by seeing two thing happen together, it is deduced that one is cause of the other.
Then again about why we humans still retain some facial hair: "...eyebrows, probably useful for exaggerating facial expressions...". Eyebrows are there so that sweat and rain don't go into the eyes!
Later (p.34) the Author again argues that bare skin is for color signaling: "...Once an animal is bare-skinned and begins to color signal, natural selection could cause specific injured spots to become more visible". That natural selection would change the chemistry of wounds to make them more visible is utterly contorted and unproved, but it gets worse. Veterinarians assure the Author that bruises on dogs are just as bad as on humans (which would not fit with his assumptions) so he goes on arguing that a controlled test should be done (if a controlled test to see a difference in color is needed then it is not for color signaling, is it?). This in not science, the Author is just making it up on the spot.
Another example is when the Author is trying to "prove" that his daughter is using symbols to represent reality in her drawings: "Look at nearly any of the objects in my daughter's drawing in Figure 1. An attempt at realism? Hardly." (p.174).
Saying that children use "symbols to represent reality" because his 5 year daughter's drawing is not "realistic" seems quite hilarious to me, but this is the level at which the Author reasons throughout the whole book. (One could argue that any drawing is a symbol of reality, even a photograph)
The main proposition of the last chapter, the 4th, is: "...If written words must be built out of multiple symbols, then to make words look object-like, symbols should look like object parts. And as we'll see, that's what culture did. Culture dealt with the speech-writer dilemma by designing letters that look like the object parts found in nature..."
And what constitutes "nature" according to the Author? Cubes (!?). Due to the bottom left corner of a cube (a common shape in nature, according to the Author) he concludes that an shape "L" is commonly found in nature (!?), and this is the reason we find it in writing (!?). So THIS "proves" that the letter "L" was inspired by nature. Totally absurd.
I am not saying that in some culture, some written symbol was not inspired by something seen in nature. The problem is that arranging a number of cubes (this is nature?) and finding that some parts of the resulting figure resemble letters constitutes no kind of proof. Very bad science, again. Furthermore there are more plausible explanation as to why letters are shaped with "strokes". A stroke in stone was easier than carving out a curve for instance.
I could go on and on with this kind of examples. The point I want to make is that the Author makes some very bold statements throughout the book with weak or absurd evidence.
I have found the 5 star reviews given to this book totally misleading. There is no inquiry, no verification of what the Author states, everything is taken for true. Readers are praising the Author for revolutionary explanations about vision, when in fact these have only been proposed, and very weakly that is.


