sdrawkcab

Dec. 1st, 2007 02:37 pm
threemonkeys: (Wonderfalls)
[personal profile] threemonkeys
I was at the optometrist today when I noticed something strange. I've been getting regular annual checkups at this optometrist for the last 9 years. When you get your eyes checked you read letters off an eye chart. I realised today that I have always read the letters on the chart from right to left. Any other time, like the rest of you, I read left to right.

The optometrist never comments on it. From that I suspect it happens fairly quite frequently.

Puzzled?

I was, until I realised something. The eye chart is reflected in a big mirror. It is a way to increase the effective distance from the eye to the chart in a fairly small room. Subconsciously I'm aware of the mirror and trying to make a reading adjustment even though all the letters have a vertical mirror symmetry (i.e. A, W, Y, T, V, X, O, H, U, I M only). That means that deep in my brain, something is attempting to adjust for a symmetry transform. It is interesting that it is so deep. Humans have really only had reliable mirrors since Roman times I think - far too short a time for an evolutionary adjustment to have come from that source. Even bronze age mirrors still make it a very short time in evolutionary biology terms but I can't see that they are good enough anyway to trigger the need and anyway, there wasn't a lot of writing about then. Therefore it must be something else - a conditioned reflex perhaps. Or perhaps it is just me. I did spend a big chunk of my life looking at symmetry transforms after all

Date: 2007-12-01 04:35 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] phillberrie.livejournal.com
Your not alone in your mirror craziness.

I am also apparently intrinsically aware of the transformation. This is not ordinarily a problem but it does show up at the dinner table when trying to indicate to someone which cheek an offending morsel of food is on.

I automatically place myself in their position (as if they were my image in a mirror) and point to the appropriate cheek from their perspective. They almost invariably reach for the opposite cheek assuming a direct relationship.

I also have a good spatial awareness, perhaps this has something to do with it.

Date: 2007-12-01 04:41 am (UTC)
ext_112556: (Default)
From: [identity profile] threemonkeys.livejournal.com
Interesting - my spatial awareness is pretty good too (which might actually help explain my interest in 3D symmetry concepts).

No comments please about it being the only thing I'm aware of - the truth might hurt ;-)

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