Categories: Science & Technology

Blinking Actually Boosts Your Vision, And We Never Even Noticed : ScienceAlert

Spread the love


Blinking: it happens every few seconds without you even thinking – unless of course, you’re engaging in a staring competition of eye-watering proportions.

Advertisements

Tears well up as you resist the urge to blink, and when you finally do… Oh, sweet relief. Your eyeballs are bathed in fluid as your lids momentarily close.

Advertisements

But blinking does more than wet the eye. Strangely, it also helps with vision, a new study shows. It’s the latest effort in a string of research studies attempting to pinpoint what blinking is useful for, as we do it more often than necessary to lubricate the eye.

“We show that blinking increases the power of retinal stimulation and that this effect significantly enhances visibility despite the time lost in exposure to the external scene,” University of Rochester neuroscientist Bin Yang and colleagues write in their published paper.

Advertisements
Advertisements

Past research has suggested that blinking refreshes our attention, helps with object recognition, and chops an otherwise endless stream of visual and auditory information into chunks for processing.

Advertisements

However, we also lose our vision in short 300-millisecond blackouts each time we blink, even if we don’t notice it happening. You might expect such an interruption to cut through the activity of neurons responsive to visual inputs – but perhaps not in a positive way.

Surprisingly, a 2016 study showed that although neural activity decreases as eyelids close, it rebounds to a higher level immediately following a blink, which is thought to enhance vision.

Following on from those findings, Yang and colleagues used high-resolution eye-tracking in this new study to investigate how blinking affects vision in 12 people who viewed images of varying contrast on a screen.

Advertisements

Since both eyes blink together, only one eye was tracked in each person, and the intensity of light, or luminance, of the participants’ visual inputs was also recorded.

Relative to periods where participants fixated on the screen, the researchers found blinks increased the strength of visual input signals by modulating the intensity of light falling on the retina.

This visual boost was seen when participants were instructed to blink and when they did so reflexively. Unlike previous research that found only real blinks improved attention, not simulated ones, changes in luminosity imitating a blink also momentarily boosted vision.

“Rather than impairing visual processing as commonly assumed, blinks enhance sensitivity,” Yang and colleagues report.

What’s more, the researchers found blinks help reformat visual information, similar to how other eye movements we’re oblivious to (super-fast saccades and ocular drifts) shape vision by adding spatial markers and ‘timestamps’ to the video that is our vision.

Considering we spend an estimated 10 percent of our waking hours with our eyes closed because of blinking, it’s comforting to know that at least it’s for a good reason.

The study has been published in PNAS.



Source link

Advertisements
Clare Watson

Share
Published by
Clare Watson

Recent Posts

UK’s youngest MP praised by BBC host for ‘batting back’ question | News

The UK’s youngest MP was praised by BBC Breakfast hosts for “batting back” their questions…

35 mins ago

Kazakhstan’s secret city sets sights on becoming seaside resort

A picture taken on June 17, 2024 shows a semi-abandoned base in the steppe around…

42 mins ago

Reformist candidate Pezeshkian wins Iran’s presidential runoff election

Reformist candidate Masoud Pezeshkian won Iran’s runoff presidential election Saturday, besting hardliner Saeed Jalili by…

44 mins ago

Princeton Scientists Develop Passive Mechanism To Cool Buildings in the Summer and Warm Them in the Winter

Princeton and UCLA researchers have created a new passive climate control technology using engineered coatings…

51 mins ago

Gary Neville: England have tournament know-how – but must step up again vs Netherlands | Football News

Gary Neville praised the "tournament know-how" of Gareth Southgate's England side after they successfully navigated…

55 mins ago

Jay Slater’s desperate family want massive new search with drones & radar on Tenerife mountain as hunt enters third week

JAY SLATER'S family are “desperate” for permission from Spanish cops to use specialist equipment in…

2 hours ago

This website uses cookies.