Originally posted by: Toastedlightly
Originally posted by: Smilin
I can pee further than all of you.
back to OT with ye!
Oh, how wrong you are.
My vision is 20/60(L) and 20/200 (R)!. I'll see farther than you any day ;-)
Originally posted by: Toastedlightly
Originally posted by: Smilin
I can pee further than all of you.
back to OT with ye!
Ah, the classic God complex of the neuroscientist. Only the brain/nervous system are challenging! Since I study them, I are teh smartest! :roll: The only reason you think this is true is because you've spent your time studying the neurophysiology instead of the eye itself. I've spent plenty of time studying the eye and a little on the neuro - enough to know that there is sufficient complexity in any one subsystem of either to occupy a dozen lifetimes of a researcher.Originally posted by: Xdreamer
Point 2. The eye is nothing compared to the complexity of the neuronal systems for visual perception.
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
Ah, the classic God complex of the neuroscientist. Only the brain/nervous system are challenging! Since I study them, I are teh smartest! :roll: The only reason you think this is true is because you've spent your time studying the neurophysiology instead of the eye itself. I've spent plenty of time studying the eye and a little on the neuro - enough to know that there is sufficient complexity in any one subsystem of either to occupy a dozen lifetimes of a researcher.Originally posted by: Xdreamer
Point 2. The eye is nothing compared to the complexity of the neuronal systems for visual perception.
Originally posted by: Xdreamer
This stuff is my area of study. I will attempt to explain this in laymans terms.
<snip>
I thought you got one free with every diploma that has the word 'neuro' on it. At least, I know that's true here at WashU.Originally posted by: Xdreamer
You are correct of course. The eye is fantastically complex and wonderfully functional.
BTW i dont have a god complex... but do you know where i can get one?![]()
Originally posted by: gerwen
Originally posted by: Xdreamer
This stuff is my area of study. I will attempt to explain this in laymans terms.
<snip>
Interesting i came across this today. I just watched a show on Discovery last night. It detailed part of what your saying. The gist of it was that there are 2 data streams originating in the eye. They are fed to a part of the brain (which they named with an acronym, and i'm not neuroscientist.) From there it was separated into a perception oriented data stream, and an action oriented data stream. The former went to a part of the brain that allowed it to be acted on in a conscious manner, and became part of our perception of the world. The latter went to a different part of the brain that basically allowed the body to act on the eye's information, before the conscious mind could even perceive it.
fyi Mindscan, by Robert J Sawyer
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
I thought you got one free with every diploma that has the word 'neuro' on it. At least, I know that's true here at WashU.Originally posted by: Xdreamer
You are correct of course. The eye is fantastically complex and wonderfully functional.
BTW i dont have a god complex... but do you know where i can get one?![]()
![]()
And the opinion of every other neuroscientist I've ever met.Originally posted by: Xdreamer
No offense intended to the noble eye, but i find the 1400 odd ml of oatmeal like mush in your skull (brain) which recieves, integrates, and responds to many sensory modalities, to be far more complex and interesting than the eye.
But that is just one mans oppinion.
Originally posted by: CTho9305
Originally posted by: gsellis
The human eye has a rate of about 30 frames per second. Anything faster and our brain fills in the gaps.
Interesting claim... download all the files in this directory, run the program, and let me know if you still feel the same way.
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
And that power laws weren't invented by neurologists to describe the response function of sensory perception - they were developed by engineers for rheological purposes. We've just loaned them to you guys.![]()
Thanks. I can't take credit for the quote though - I saw it on a sign in a bar that one of my brothers used to work in.Originally posted by: Xdreamer
Why thank you.BTW I love your sig.
