English, asked by ayushmaandey13, 1 year ago

Can you now answer?
You saw a dream--Did the eyes see it?
It is the eye that see or the brain through the eyes?...

Answer....

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
5

Not everyone sees in their dreams.


In order to have a visual dream, one must first set up their visual brain by using this system. (This is another way of saying that a person who is blind from birth is unlikely to have a visual dream - an exception will be offered shortly.)


A. Valvo (1971) studied people who were born with normal vision but lost their sight due to accidents. In these accidents, only the optics of the eye were damaged, for example, destruction of the cornea, without harming deeper visual structures in the brain. He found that for a period of time after the blinding event, subjects continued to dream in visual images. However, over long periods of time (Valvo's subjects had been blind for twenty years), dreams became more tactile and auditory. Vision was no longer reported, even in dreams.


After twenty years of blindness, the subjects in Valvo’s study underwent a new surgical procedure to restore the optics of their eyes. It was expected that they would then be able to see, since the impediment to sight had been removed.The movie "At First Sight" incorporates some of Valvo's findings into the experience of a young man whose sight was "restored" by this procedure, but who could not interpret social cues.


Thus, from Valvo’s study, we now know that some special area of the brain is necessary for the construction of visual dreams, but that it will be lost with disuse (“use it or lose it”).


Mark Solms (1997), who studied brain injured patients in search of areas associated with visual dreams, reported that patients with Parietal lobe damage could not construct the stage upon which the visual dream occurs.


The Parietal lobe understands space. It even understands spatial language, such as "up, down, left, and right". A person with a Parietal injury cannot use these words when they connote space, such as "put your left hand up", but can use them to say "I woke up", "I'm feeling down", "I left my book at home" and "I am right on time".


It cannot be said that the Parietal lobe is the necessary and sufficient location of dream construction, only that it plays a role.


ayushmaandey13: It is too long but thanks for helping me
Anonymous: welcome
Answered by Avnidhingra03
4

I think that our brain see the dream... Not our eyes

I don't know if answer's correct... m just guessing.


ayushmaandey13: Thanks
Avnidhingra03: My pleasure
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