Thursday, July 5, 2012

Lost in the Wilderness

That's jumping ahead, though. Pixilated camo prints, or at least the theory behind them, arrived long before the fashion craze. Their history begins with an experimental psychologist (and Jungian analyst) named Lt. Col. Timothy O'Neill. While teaching at West Point, O'Neill thought to apply new ideas about human perception to the art of the concealment. Neuroscientists had divided the human visual system into a pair of parallel circuits with different functions: One neural pathway alerts us to the presence of objects in the world (where is it?), while the other helps us figure out what those objects might be (what is it?).

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=033f91136f2f341f8406e2d800c52a2d

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