June7
Donna Williams aged 4
Those who grow up meaning deaf (verbal agnosia) often have exceptionally good use of peripheral vision. Those with a form of meaning blindness called Simultagnosia in which one sees the part and loses the whole often employ peripheral vision as a means of filtering out the level of incoming information they’d otherwise get through rods in the front of the eyes as a means of reducing sensory flooding, allowing the brain more time to process what’s left in a similar way that some therapeutic tinted lenses do too. A recent
study showed peripheral vision is also more highly developed among those who deaf from an early age.
Donna Williams, BA Hons, Dip Ed.
Author, artist, singer-songwriter, screenwriter.
Autism consultant and public speaker.
http://www.donnawilliams.net
I wonder what sorts of things peripheral vision allows us to do. It would be great if I could meet all sorts of people who have agnosia. Plus remember that you wanted to see my childhood pictures, if you go to my site and you type in kaitlin’s childhood you can find the pictures. Did you know that theirs a film about agnosia except it’s in spanish?
how exciting you now have your own blog. congratulations.