25-11-24
தேர்தல் முடிவுகள்ஹைகோர்ட் அதிரடி தீர்ப்பு - டேமேஜ்' ஆன தி,மு.க. அரசின் இமேஜ் !தமிழக பா.ஜ.க.வில் அ.தி.மு.க. உறவுக்கு ஆதரவு குரல்கள் !துக்ளக் தர்பார்"பா.ஜ.க. செய்த உதவி - நன்றி மறந்த எடப்பாடி" - அ.மு.மு.க. பொதுச் செயலாளர் டி.டி.வி.தினகரன்ஆளும் கட்சியின் கருவியா போலீஸ் .....?ஜன்னல் வழியேபண வீக்கமும், நிதியமைச்சரின் விளக்கமும் !வீண் நாடகங்கள்மீண்டும் ட்ரம்ப் -அடிப்படை மாற்றம்கொள்ளையடிக்கப்படும் ரேஷன் பொருட்கள்ஸ்டார்ட் - அப் இந்தியா திட்டம்கண்ணீர் வடிக்கும் விவசாயிகள்டெல்லி டைரிிமஹாபாரதம் பேசுகிறது - சோடியர் மிஸ்டர் துக்ளக்கார்டூன் சத்யாகார்டூன் ராஜுகார்டூன் அட்டை
Email to editor
Email to Support
Thuglak Online Store
Cho's Collections


Kathadi Ramamurthi's


Tamil Telefilms
6 VCD/DVD Collections


Bharatanatyam
5 - VCD/DVD Collections


Yoga
8 - VCD/DVD Collections


Carnatic Music - Vocal
25 - VCD/DVD Collections


Devotional
21 - VCD/DVD Collections


Carnatic Music - Instrument
10 - VCD/DVD Collections


Mouli's
6 - VCD/DVD Collections


Crazy's
22 - VCD/DVD Collections


S.Ve.Shekher's
15 - VCD/DVD Collections


Kuchupudi
6 VCD/DVD Collections


Y.Gee.Mahendra's
8 - VCD/DVD Collections


Dummies Drama's
6 - VCD/DVD Collections

Those blinded by brain injury may still 'see'

Category :International Sub Category :Americas
2009-09-03 00:00:00
   Views : 667

Toronto, Sep 3 - We rarely knock over a plateful of food or glass of orange juice as we reach for our morning cup of coffee.

A new study by the University of Western Ontario (UWO) has helped unlock the mystery of how our brain allows us to avoid these undesired objects.

The study was led by Mel Goodale, professor in visual neuroscience, Chris Striemer and colleagues in UWO psychology department.

'We automatically choose a path for our hand that avoids hitting any obstacles that may be in the way,' says Goodale.

'Every day, we perform hundreds of actions of this sort without giving a moment's thought as to how we accomplish these deceptively simple tasks.'

In the study, a patient who had become completely blind on his left side following a stroke to the main visual area of the brain was asked to avoid obstacles as he reached out to touch a target in his right - or 'good' - visual field.

Not surprisingly, he was able to avoid them as any normal-sighted individual would. However, when obstacles were placed on his blind side, he was still able to avoid them - even though he never reported having seen them.

'The patient's behaviour shows he is sensitive to the location of obstacles he is completely unaware of,' Striemer says.




Author :Indo Asian News Service



Bookmark and Share

Related News

  • Brad Pitt is still Angelina Jolie's date
  • Brad Pitt is still Angelina Jolie's date
  • Balco chimney crash deaths climb to 26, dozens still trapped
  • Michael's elder brother still grieving
  • Love Hewitt still has body hang-ups
  • Government still undecided on special forces against Maoists
  • Indian fan industry still reeling under slowdown
  • India tells Pakistan, still waiting for more action on 26/11