Eyes (and Other Senses) in the Back of Your Head

Posted by Tom on September 20, 2007

Ever heard of peripersonal space? It’s “the bubble of space around a person’s body that his brain as part of him in its map of his body.”

Body map? Yeah, it turns out that the human brain is filled with representations of the body and the environment it finds itself in. The maps are for both sensing and for moving. It’s these maps that you use to move your arm or leg, and not the muscles that reside there, at least not directly.

Sandra and Matthew Blakeslee beautifully and clearly describe the ideas of body brain maps in The Body Has a Mind of Its Own: How Body Maps in Your Brain Help You Do (Almost) Everything Better. I just finished an initial reading yesterday, and I plan to have much more to say about this wonderful book. Lots of very rich Feldenkrais-related material here.

But what reminded me of it was this New Scientist post on an experimental headband that helps its wearers sense physical stuff around them when blindfolded. There are even some video illustrations. And the New Scientist post mentions other sources of information about this sort of contraption.

It’s not hard to predict that these sorts of haptic devices will be widely available, probably pretty soon. What’ll be really interesting is when they hit the consumer market. All sorts of athletic applications, I’d think.

But most interesting to me is what kind of effect it’ll have on kids as they develop. Maybe the term “eyes in the back of the head” will be more than a metaphor in the future.

Trackbacks

Trackbacks are closed.

Comments

Leave a response

Comments