Thursday, 1 November 2012

231 - Project 3

Project 3: The Experience
In the first two projects I was looking heavily into how we as humans use our eyes. I wanted to study the effects of having some part of sight taken away or altered. “Sight is without doubt our most dominant sense, yielding nine-tenths of our knowledge of the external world” (Pocock, 1981) I knew the experience of having something we rely on so much changed or altered would be an interesting one.  One of the most profound experiences I studied was the effect of having someone’s peripheral vision cut off or obscured. By taking the peripherals away the way in which we see things is completely changed, peripheral vision makes up more than 95% of what a person can see, the other 5% is our range of focus in the vision eye spectrum. By taking the use and ability of being able to see out of focus images around our area of focus is one of them most useful abilities the human eye has and it so often goes unnoticed. By limiting the sense of vision and striping back the experience of sight without peripherals I hoped to create an austere mood. By creating a pair of glasses that had small holes cut through them I wanted to create a false sense of tunnel vision. I had the participants attempt to walk around a room, sit down and use their hands to pick objects up and put them down. The use of motor skills while under the influence of limited sight was a very interesting experience that I sought to explain by studying the sensory experiences.
Our vision is taken for granted every day. Being able to see cars coming from around corners or see obstacles travelling at fast speeds passed our field of vision is one of the most important aspects of human sight. Mark Stokes explains that “our perception of the external environment is continually shaped by internal goals and expectations”(Stokes, 2009), by taking this expectation that our vision can never fail us, and by limiting the perception of a person’s vision the entire experience of sight and vision becomes austere. When our vision is refined and stripped back of key components we become aware that what we never think about, what is so ‘internally expected’ by our brains, can actually be the most important aspect to the experience. 
The object I created to make the experience of austere vision was a very simple and austere construction in itself. By painting a pair of glasses black and attaching thick sheets of black paper to the outside of the field of peripheral vision and drilling two small holes in the lenses of the glasses I could severely reduce the cone of vision for the eye. This design aided the idea of austerity in the experience by being as simple and austere as possible, “austere beauty of ruthless simplification of interaction” (Jones, 1969). The effects of the glasses were instantaneous, every participant expectations of what the experience would be like were instantly changed when they were asked to move around and pick objects up. The experience affected not only the field of view but also the sense of perception of space and distance. “it is obvious that the handicap of tunnel vision would be lessened if the item being viewed could be reduced in angular size, that of it would fall within the narrow cone of vision” (Gordon, 1984), participants would sway as they walked and had to check which direction they were travelling constantly. Depth perception was decreased as well. By cutting the peripheral vision out our brains find it harder to form three dimensional objects in close areas. I believe this effect helped create the mood and emotion of austerity by stripping back our perception of what we see even more, by only seeing objects as two dimensional shapes the experience was so refined that most participants wanted to take the glasses off before they either fell over or walked into something. This experience further emphasises the fact that our sense of sight is not only the most important sense for experiencing anything but also that it is the most utilised sense when it comes to motor skills and concentration. The experience left participants unable to carry on with physical movement leaving them idle, trapped in an aura of limited potential. Movement was near impossible and trying to perceive objects and limitations of sight was impossible. The experience was so linear and refined that “momentary awareness of a visual scene is very limited” (Huang, 2007) the only thing the participants were capable of doing was looking around their environment, studying it and planning a safe route for travelling anywhere.
I believe that the fact that the participants had to plan and double check their movement was a great example of an austere emotion. By having to check, plan and remember where obstacles were and how to best get around them the participant had to memorize the smallest of things only to achieve the most basic of movements and interactions.
Having such an important sense such as sight altered and obscured so radically with such a basic and simple interaction as looking through two tiny holes creates an experience so austere and refined it makes participants realise how important their sense of sight is and how austere the feeling of having their peripherals completely removed can be.
Creating an austere experience is not easy, the human mind and body is so complex and the senses so linked and connected that stripping away the parts that makes up the whole can be very difficult. But I believe I achieved an experience that is purely austere and totally refined and disconnected to all other senses. Sight and visual stimulus is granted the most important sense of all because without it we are stunned and disjointed from our other senses; I created the austere experience of having sight stripped of all its complexities with the most simple of tools and implementations to create not only an austere object but the most austere visual experience possible.

Bibliography:
Pocock, D.C. (1981), Sight and Knowledge Vol. 6, No.4, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 385
Stokes, M. (2009), National Academy of Sciences Vol. 106, No.46, Nov. 17th, Shape Specific Preparatory Activity Mediates Attention to Targets in Human Visual Cortex
Jones, P.L. (1969), Leonardo Vol.2, No.2, April, The Failure of Basic Design
Gordon,I. (1984), Leonardo Vol.17, No.3, A Visual Aid for Artists and Others with Retinitis Pigmentosa
Huang,L.(2007), American Association for the Advancement of Science, New Series Vol. 317, No.5839, Aug 10th,  Characterizing the Limits of Human Visual Awareness