Visual information can be processed unconsciously when the area of the
brain that records what the eye sees is temporarily shut down,
according to research at Rice University in Houston.
The research, published the week of Oct. 31 in the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences' (PNAS) online Early Edition, suggests the
brain has more than one pathway along which visual information can be
sent.
For the study, the researchers induced temporary, reversible blindness
lasting only a fraction of a second in nine volunteers with normal
vision. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), a harmless noninvasive
technique using brief magnetic pulses, was applied to the volunteers'
visual cortex -- the area at the back of the brain that processes what
the eye sees - to interrupt the normal visual pathway. The volunteers
looked at a computer screen, and during their momentary blindness,
either a horizontal or a vertical line or a red or a green dot flashed
on the screen.
Researchers then asked the study participants whether they had seen a
horizontal or a vertical line; because their primary visual pathway had
been shut down, the participants reported that they saw nothing.
However, when forced to guess which line had appeared on their computer
screen, the participants gave the correct answer 75 percent of the
time. When the participants had to guess whether a red or a green dot
had flashed on the screen, they gave the correct answer with 81 percent
accuracy.
"This high degree of accuracy for both the directional orientation and
color tasks was significantly above chance," said Tony Ro, associate
professor of psychology and principal investigator for the study. "Even
though the human primary visual cortex activity was temporarily shut
down, it's clear that detailed visual information was still being
processed unconsciously."
Because only a certain region of the thalamus - the area of the brain
where all sensory information is relayed -- can process color, the
study provides evidence that there must be a pathway that goes through
this region of the thalamus to the higher visual centers of the brain,
Ro said.
"In addition to providing direct evidence that unconscious processing
takes place within the brain - a controversial claim that was advanced
by the likes of Sigmund Freud and William James - our results suggest
that multiple pathways relay visual input into the central nervous
system for different types of processing," Ro said. "And our study also
begins to shed light on the brain structures that are necessary for
consciousness, with the primary visual cortex playing an essential role
for visual awareness."
The phenomenon of "blindsight" has been reported in patients with brain
damage who report not seeing something but correctly identify the shape
and location when forced to guess. Ro noted that his study demonstrates
that TMS can be used successfully to induce blindsight in people with
normal vision.
Rice University News Release
31 October 2005
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