We would immediately notice if the outside world suddenly
went dark every few seconds. But we rarely become aware
of our blinks, even though they cause a similar reduction
in the amount of light entering the eye. So why are we not
aware of the frequent mini-blackouts caused by blinks? In
the 1980s, scientists discovered that visual sensitivity
begins decreasing immediately before a blink, but the brain
mechanisms underlying this process have until now remained
unclear. As they report this week, Davina Bristow and a
team of scientists at University College London led by Dr.
Geraint Rees may now have found a reason for why blinks
go unnoticed.
In their study, the researchers devised a clever way
to monitor the brain's activity under conditions in which
the amount of light received by the eye was constant,
regardless of blinking. The researchers achieved this
by placing a light-emitting optical fibre in the mouth
of volunteers wearing light-proof goggles. Because the
light was bright enough to pass through tissues of the
face, the fibre could be used to illuminate the retina
through the roof of the mouth. Therefore, the amount of
light falling on the retina remained constant, even when
the volunteers blinked. The researchers then performed
a type of brain scan known as functional magnetic resonance
imaging and could thus measure whether the act of blinking--independently
of any change in light normally caused by eyelid closure--would
influence the level of light-activated brain activity.
The UCL scientists found that when volunteers were blinking,
brain activity was suppressed in areas that respond to
visual input, even though the light falling onto the retina
remained constant throughout the blink. Many of these
brain areas are activated when people become conscious
of visual events or objects in the outside world. "Transiently
suppressing these brain areas involved in visual awareness
during blinks may be a neural mechanism for preventing
the brain from becoming aware of the eyelid sweeping down
over the pupil during a blink and the world going dark,"
explains Professor Frith. In summing up the study's implications,
the authors suggest that when we blink, the brain may
just miss it.