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Pastimes : A CENTURY OF LIONS/THE 20TH CENTURY TOP 100

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To: Neocon who wrote (3243)6/19/2003 10:43:51 AM
From: Volsi Mimir  Read Replies (1) of 3246
 
Can You See With Your Tongue?
The brain is so adaptable, some researchers now think, that any of the five senses can be rewired

discover.com

<snip>
I'm sitting at a table draped in black, surrounded by black curtains. Candles, spheres, and unfamiliar symbols have been placed before me. My right hand, arms, and head are strapped with wires, and my mouth is filled with electrodes. I'm blindfolded.
Although this may sound like a scene for a Black Mass, it's even stranger than that: I'm trying to see with my tongue.
The gear I'm wearing was invented by Paul Bach-y-Rita, a neuroscientist at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. Bach-y-Rita has devoted much of his career to a single, revolutionary concept: that our senses are interchangeable. The brain, Bach-y-Rita and many other neuroscientists believe, is an organ of astonishing plasticity: If one part of it is damaged, another part can serve the same function. To prove the point, his collaborator Kathi Kamm, a professor of occupational therapy at the university's Milwaukee campus, has strapped a small video camera to my forehead and connected it to a long plastic strip hanging from my mouth. A laptop computer reduces the camera's image to 144 pixels. Those pixels are converted to an electric current that is sent to the business end of the plastic strip—a 12-by-12 grid of electrodes that rests on my tongue.
Kamm sits down in front of me. She says she's holding a ball, but I can't hear a sound as she rolls it back and forth over the cloth-covered table. She says the ball will soon be rolling toward me—to my left, my right, or straight at me—but my eyes and ears have no way to tell where it's going.
That leaves my tongue. It has more tactile nerve endings than any part of the body other than the lips. What the camera sees is zapped onto my tongue's wet, conductive surface. As Kamm rolls the ball, my blindfolded eyes see nothing, but a tingling passes over my tongue. When she sends the ball my way, my hand leaps out to the left.
I've caught it.

"We don't see with our eyes," Bach-y-Rita is fond of saying. "we see with our brains." The ears, eyes, nose, tongue, and skin are just inputs that provide information. When the brain processes this data, we experience the five senses, but where the data come from may not be so important. "Clearly, there are connections to certain parts of the brain, but you can modify that," Bach-y-Rita says. "You can do so much more with a sensory organ than what Mother Nature does with it."
<snip> .......longer article
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My friend for a school experiment had herself blindfolded for 3 days (along with others) and tried to experience blindness....
it would not be the same experience and after this article maybe not even close but her ability to use the other senses
and relate to the surroundings became enhanced and (her thought) more perceptible to other sensations we normally do not consciously recognize having one sense (sight) which dominates the ability to evaluate what is occurring ....

Sometimes I feel like Helen Keller-- I only know what I am told, even the experiences which are not understood are usually explained before "(quote,unquote)Realization"---
which after all is personal to each one---- we do not see the same thing or relate or recall the same experience......

hmmm there is an other article about some people who smell what they see......let me see if I can find it.
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