Search
Powered By HealthLine
Special Offers
Health Tools
 Heart Healthy Diet
 Ideal Body Weight Calculator
 Diet Reviews
 Fitness and Family
 Quiz: Test Your Fitness IQ
 Exercise and Fitness Guide
 Eat Out Smart
 Healthy Cooking
 BMI Calculator
Featured Conditions
 Diet & Exercise
 Stop Smoking
 Food & Fitness
 High Blood Pressure
 Cholesterol
 Heart
Resources
Healthscout News
3D Health Animations
Health Videos
Quizzes & Tools
Health Encyclopedia
In-Depth Reports
Library & Communities
News Archive
Drug Library
Find a Therapist
Enter City or Zip Code:
Powered by Psychology Today
PR Newswire
 Read latest







Channels
Home |  Today | Women| Men| Kids| Seniors| Diseases| Addictions| Sex & Relationships| Diet, Fitness, Looks| Alternative Medicine| Drug Checker
 Printer Friendly  Send to a Friend

Brain Slow to Judge Fast-Moving Objects Head-On

It builds a statistical model based on what is, in fact, a very unhurried world, study says


Related Encyclopedia
 border=
Abdominoplasty
Acoustic Neurinoma
Animal Bites
Ankle Sprains
More...

Related Healthscout Videos
 border=
Nutrition and Cancer
Nutrition and Osteoporosis
Importance of Good Nutrition
Critical Nutrition
More...

Related Animations
 border=
Allergy
LASIK
More...

Related Drug Information
 border=
Adderal XR
Concerta
Coumadin
Depakote
More...

Related News Articles
 border=
Study Recruiting From Alzheimer's-Prone Families
Beware of Toxic Toys This Holiday Season
Alzheimers Prevention Found in Grapes
New Species of Ebola Virus
More...

WEDNESDAY, Aug. 6 (HealthDay News) -- If you are not experienced at dodging flying or speeding objects, your best bet may be to just get out of the way, a new study says.

People's visual systems judge objects -- balls or cars, for example -- coming straight toward them based more on past experience than actual perception, according to findings published in this week's issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. For most, the world is a slow place.

Text Continues Below



"We may think we live in a fast moving, hectic world, but statistically, our environment moves around us slowly," Andrew Welchman, a researcher with the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, said in a council news release. "Apart from the odd speeding car, buildings, landscape and walls around us all move past us at slow and predictable speeds. Our brains are constantly building up a statistical picture of the world around and, based on experience, it is a statistically slow world."

"When an object moves quickly -- be it a football, cricket ball or, for our ancestors, a spear -- our brains have to interpret the movement rapidly and, because our brains draw on experience, it's often biased by what it already knows. The less certain we are about what we see, the more we are influenced by the brain's statistical assumptions, which means in some circumstances, we get it wrong."

Welchman and colleagues at the University of Birmingham and the Max Planck Institute in Tubingen, Germany, developed a mathematical model to show how the brain predicts the motion of an incoming object and tested this with experiments. While people are generally better at judging sideways movement, approaching objects tend to look slower than they are. They also tend to misperceive location, often thinking that an object will miss them, when it ends up hitting them.

Page:  1 | 2 | Next >>

-- Kevin McKeever

Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Last updated 8/6/2008

Related Links
 border=
From Healthscout's partner site on diet & exercise, MyDietExercise.com
QUIZ: What's your ideal body weight?
QUIZ: Check your body mass index (BMI) online!
QUIZ: Rate your carbohydrate intake





SOURCE: Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, news release, Aug. 4, 2008


We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health
information:
verify here.
About The HealthScout Network Contact Us
Copyright © 2001-2008. The HealthCentralNetwork, Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy  Terms of Service   Site Map