Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated:
{164}{243}NARRATOR: Too often, | we take our bodies for granted,
{248}{313}but under pressure, | our bodies can show us
{318}{412}how extraordinary | they truly are.
{432}{485}This complex machine grew
{490}{575}out of millions of years | of evolution.
{580}{647}So intricate, | we're still mystified
{652}{732}by many of the things | going on inside us.
{737}{773}A hidden world,
{778}{916}but one we can now explore | in 3-D as never before.
{921}{1044}Our sight relies on the most | complex system in our bodies.
{1084}{1154}Using three-quarters | of our brain power'
{1159}{1188}when we're challenged,
{1193}{1297}our eyes focus on the smallest | detail at lightning speed.
{1385}{1449}They allow us to see | in the dark'
{1454}{1520}even to see to the magic | of the impossible.
{1546}{1652}Our brain allows us to see | even while we sleep.
{1669}{1795}And someday, we may be able | to see without our eyes.
{1814}{1917}That's how extraordinary | our sight truly is
{1922}{1987}when we're pushed to the limits.
{2067}{2152}[ Siren wailing ]
{2157}{2239}[ l ndistinct talking on radio ]
{2244}{2354}A murder suspect races | through downtown Los Angeles.
{2359}{2412}[ Tires screeching ]
{2653}{2755}Pursuing him is LAPD officer | Stan Berry.
{2790}{2876}What he's got to do | in this superfast world
{2881}{2958}is to figure out what matters | and what doesn't
{2963}{3011}at 1 00 miles an hour.
{3016}{3073}MAN: 1 4, there's two occupants | in the car.
{3101}{3141}[ Horn blares ]
{3146}{3256}NARRATOR: And to keep up with | the suspect without crashing.
{3305}{3373}BERRY: l need to know about | the traffic to the right of me,
{3378}{3442}traffic coming | to the left of me.
{3447}{3513}But you also need to focus | on what's ahead of you.
{3518}{3586}ls there pedestrians | walking down the street?
{3625}{3669}And then also try to keep up
{3674}{3758}with the fleeing suspect' | as well.
{3812}{3892}NARRATOR: Nature designed the | eyes to let him do just that.
{3985}{4072}Sight guides the human body.
{4077}{4114}[ Tires screeching ]
{4119}{4207}[ Siren wailing ]
{4271}{4328}2- 1 -900, l am west...
{4333}{4406}NARRATOR: Many animals | have special kinds of vision.
{4411}{4495}But in humans, we can do it all.
{4567}{4627}Like no other creature on Earth,
{4632}{4732}our vision can distinguish | around 1 0 million colors...
{4737}{4802}[ Horn blaring ]
{4807}{4865}...switch focus from infinity
{4870}{4934}to mere inches | in a fifth of a second...
{5000}{5096}... pinpoint detail | in the brightest sunshine
{5101}{5146}or darkest shadow...
{5203}{5324}...take in a wide-angle view | of almost 1 80 degrees.
{5329}{5450}All of this takes the massive | power of the human brain.
{5555}{5627}70% of the neurons in the brain
{5632}{5707}in some way subserve | the visual system.
{5724}{5819}lt's been given | an extraordinarily high degree
{5824}{5849}of emphasis
{5854}{5961}by all the mechanisms that | have gone into its creation.
{5966}{6027}[ l ndistinct talking on radio ]
{6032}{6119}NARRATOR: Human eyes function | as survival sensors,
{6124}{6202}giving us essential information | at the crucial time.
{6336}{6410}Berry constantly relies on them.
{6462}{6584}The eyes' mechanics are | the most complex in the body.
{6589}{6655}Their intricacy is unmatched.
{6717}{6820}As a ball, the eye pivots | in all directions,
{6825}{6890}locking onto moving targets.
{6962}{7052}lt does so with the help | of unlikely allies --
{7057}{7172}two cups of fat -- shock | absorbers for the eyeballs.
{7232}{7308}Light enters through an aperture | in the iris,
{7313}{7403}an elastic mesh | of interlocking fibers.
{7431}{7529}l n bright light' it snaps down | to the size of a pinhole
{7534}{7582}in a fifth of a second.
{7635}{7679}Light hits the lens --
{7684}{7771}not a hard disk' | but a bag of fluid.
{7805}{7906}The lens projects an image the | size of a large postage stamp
{7911}{7973}onto the retina | at the back of the eye.
{8012}{8113}Then the retina' | a mass of nerves,
{8118}{8175}sends impulses to the brain.
{8180}{8231}Surprisingly, the right eye
{8236}{8291}signals the left side | of the brain,
{8296}{8376}and the left eye transmits | to the right side.
{8451}{8522}Our eyes have evolved | a crucial feature
{8527}{8600}that still keeps us | from going extinct.
{8658}{8709}20 minutes into his chase,
{8714}{8829}Officer Berry is about to test | that feature to its limits.
{8880}{8928}Speeding into a dangerous | intersection,
{8933}{9040}he faces questions literally | involving life or death.
{9076}{9136}[ Engine revving ]
{9141}{9203}ls anything moving?
{9208}{9260}Where is it?
{9262}{9299}What is it?
{9304}{9382}[ Siren wailing ]
{9387}{9470}A vehicle is stopped ahead, | blocking the way.
{9503}{9612}To the right' a car speeds | toward the intersection.
{9617}{9709}On the left' | a third driver about to move.
{9941}{9972}[ Horn blares ]
{9977}{10057}But suddenly, | something else comes into view.
{10157}{10272}And here's where | the human eye's design pays off.
{10301}{10345}At the back of the eye,
{10350}{10462}most of the retina consists | of millions of rods.
{10467}{10565}These cells see no color | or detail.
{10570}{10680}But let anything anywhere | in our field of view move,
{10685}{10731}and the rods spot it.
{10819}{10922}The eyes swivel | to look directly at the vehicle.
{10980}{11065}Now other cells at mid-retina | kick in.
{11131}{11281}A pinhead-sized dot holds | six million cells called cones.
{11296}{11382}They're all about color | and detail.
{11387}{11442}DR. D'AM l CO: That's why, | when we look at something,
{11447}{11486}we look directly at it --
{11491}{11559}because we have | our highest visual acuity
{11564}{11617}right in the center.
{11622}{11681}NARRATOR: Locking his eyes | on the moving object'
{11686}{11801}Officer Berry can judge speed, | direction, and danger.
{11836}{11875}The brain responds,
{11880}{11998}sending signals | at an amazing 1 80 miles per hour
{12003}{12093}to his hands and feet in time | to clear the intersection.
{12144}{12189}[ Horn blares ]
{12194}{12287}[ Siren wailing ]
{12292}{12363}This is one of hundreds | of life-or-death decisions
{12368}{12403}that Officer Berry makes
{12408}{12483}to bring the 40-minute chase | to a safe end.
{12530}{12603}[ l ndistinct talking on radio ]
{12608}{12730}He does this thanks to the eye's | incredible skill at adjusting
{12735}{12835}when information threatens | to overload what we're seeing.
{12897}{12968}This ability matters | as much today
{12973}{13047}as it did for our ancestors.
{13087}{13167}Evolution left us | with another skill,
{13172}{13241}one that's still priceless.
{13335}{13404}l n the dark' | we can make out the world
{13409}{13483}with only the smallest | of clues.
{13584}{13676}The will to live through a fire | depends on our skill
{13681}{13798}at navigating the murderous | darkness of smoke-filled rooms.
{13803}{13904}Firefighters reach a house | in Bradenton, Florida.
{13909}{13951}Agent 56, go ahead | and charge the line.
{13956}{14039}NARRATOR: But they don't know | if anyone's trapped inside.
{14085}{14113}l'm set.
{14118}{14157}Ready?
{14251}{14305}NARRATOR: | Now firefighter Dan Fleming
{14310}{14398}enters a dangerous world | of shadows and shapes...
{14447}{14490}...so murky and cloudy,
{14495}{14577}you'd think it impossible | to see anything.
{14756}{14838}Dan struggles to build a picture | of the whole house
{14843}{14909}from frag ments he makes out | in the haze.
{14935}{14997}[ Heavy breathing ]
{15002}{15059}How is the house laid out?
{15083}{15139}Where is the fire?
{15166}{15232}Are there any survivors?
{15273}{15379}You're trying to determine | what the house looks like,
{15384}{15492}what the occupants are about' | who would be inside this home.
{15669}{15715}NARRATOR: | Despite the darkness,
{15720}{15803}Dan's eyes im mediately start | to adjust.
{15896}{15958}They have amazing sensitivity.
{15975}{16065}l n complete darkness, | from 1 4 miles away,
{16070}{16171}we can detect the light | from a single candle.
{16176}{16265}You try to find bits and pieces | of light
{16270}{16318}to help you | find your way through.
{16323}{16408}[ l ndistinct talking on radio ]
{16630}{16709}NARRATOR: l n low light' | we rely on the rod cells
{16714}{16780}that cover most of the retina.
{16785}{16887}Highly sensitive, they only | register black and white.
{16938}{16996}But Dan needs to see in color.
{17001}{17056}He's searching for a fire.
{17160}{17243}FLEM l NG: | lt was very faint at first.
{17272}{17372}l thought to myself' "That must | be the seat of the fire."
{17377}{17469}very orange glow -- | l mean, it was really orange.
{17564}{17614}NARRATOR: | To see color'
{17619}{17696}you use cone cells | at the retina's center.
{17864}{17917}We get all our color vision
{17922}{18030}from being able to distinguish | only three colors.
{18035}{18104}SADU N: The cones are sensitive | to different colors.
{18109}{18161}There's those that are | particularly sensitive
{18166}{18262}to blue light' those to green | light' and those to red light.
{18267}{18327}And they need a lot more light | to fire.
{18332}{18429}So if they get enough of | the photons of the right color'
{18434}{18480}they fire and say to you,
{18485}{18574}"There's a spot of green | or red or blue at this point."
{18615}{18716}NARRATOR: Using these red, | blue, and green signals,
{18721}{18773}the brain creates an impression
{18778}{18855}spanning the entire | visual spectrum...
{18886}{18965}...a range | of over 1 0 million colors.
{19384}{19439}[ l ndistinct talking on radio ]
{19444}{19557}Color vision leads Dan | straight to the fire.
{19825}{19919}FLEM l NG: To my surprise, | it went out very quickly.
{19924}{20008}And l started scanning around to | see what else was in that room.
{20040}{20141}Whenever you can get glimpses, | that's so important'
{20146}{20244}but l'm taking the whole room in | as l'm scanning.
{20331}{20371}NARRATOR: | l n a flash,
{20376}{20459}Dan's brain calculates | what has to be there,
{20464}{20564}even though he sees | only tiny frag ments.
{20625}{20718}This is what our brains do | constantly --
{20723}{20829}fill gaps with data | from our visual memory bank.
{20907}{20990}l n fact' our brain interprets | most of our vision
{20995}{21078}out of a lifetime | of stored images.
{21232}{21289}Then Dan recognizes something.
{21294}{21388}A white shape -- | a cup of coffee.
{21523}{21654}Black and white squares -- | a half-completed crossword.
{21789}{21840}Are these crucial signs
{21845}{21923}that someone could still be | in the house?
{21945}{22005}There, through the smoke,
{22010}{22135}Dan sees a blurred | and unusual shape.
{22202}{22280}FLEM l NG: My initial instinct was | there's something on the couch.
{22285}{22336}l'm not sure what it was.
{22418}{22458}Requesting backup!
{22486}{22524}We have a saying --
{22529}{22608}When in doubt' check it out' | and that's what l did.
{22613}{22694}Give me a hand! | l got a victim!
{22699}{22747}Get the gurney in here, guys.
{22752}{22833}NARRATOR: Dan Fleming has used | his brain's visual memory
{22838}{22947}to transform a blur | into the outline of a body,
{22952}{23006}saving a man's life.
{23086}{23136}The power of human sight
{23141}{23225}comes from millions of years | of evolution.
{23248}{23300}We can't even understand it.
{23323}{23429}And technology today can't begin | to match the sophistication
{23434}{23501}of our incredible eyes.
{23654}{23691}But for the first time,
{23696}{23799}science is pushing human vision | to new limits
{23804}{23923}by connecting directly | with the brain's vision center.
{23928}{23989}This means that one day, | we might even see
{23994}{24113}in the invisible worlds | of infrared, have X-ray vision,
{24118}{24207}or plug video games | straight into the brain.
{24302}{24359}Cheri Robertson from Missouri
{24364}{24456}is about to step | into this virtual world.
{24575}{24656}l was in a car accident | when l was 1 9 years old.
{24661}{24712}l was a passenger in the car.
{24717}{24802}And the driver fell asleep at | the wheel, and we hit head-on
{24807}{24839}with a small truck'
{24844}{24942}and both of my eyes | were just destroyed.
{25033}{25088}NARRATOR: | Hoping to regain her sight'
{25093}{25194}Cheri volunteers | for a pioneering procedure.
{25266}{25320}lt involves marrying technology
{25325}{25452}to the huge processing power | of the brain's visual cortex.
{25571}{25634}lt was a chance for me | to be able to see again
{25639}{25729}when the doctors had always told | me l would never see anything.
{25804}{25934}NARRATOR: Cheri is about to have | an extraordinary experience.
{26016}{26094}Doctors drill through both sides | of her skull,
{26099}{26157}exposing her brain.
{26209}{26275}Then they implant | two triangular plates,
{26280}{26363}each holding | 200 tiny electrodes,
{26368}{26463}directly onto Cheri's | visual cortex.
{26578}{26638}Finally, the surgeons | string cables
{26643}{26740}from the plates to terminals | sticking out of her skull.
{26839}{26913}Next' the electrodes run | through a computer
{26918}{26982}to a camera | on Cheri's eyeglasses.
{27007}{27065}All of this technology | is designed
{27070}{27143}to help Cheri regain some sight.
{27171}{27249}ROBERTSON: lt was, l guess, | quite a shock for me
{27254}{27282}when l felt my head
{27287}{27353}and l felt these terminals | sticking out behind my head.
{27358}{27470}'Cause l guess | l really wasn't expecting that.
{27510}{27581}NARRATOR: But for her to see | what the camera sees,
{27586}{27643}many things have to happen.
{27648}{27758}And that requires a step | into the unknown.
{27784}{27896}Each electrode touches a | different part of Cheri's brain.
{27901}{27960}When the system triggers | an electrode,
{27965}{28064}she sees a flash somewhere | in her visual field.
{28069}{28149}Where, the doctors don't know.
{28154}{28193}Now.
{28219}{28310}NARRATOR: So they trigger | each electrode one by one
{28315}{28412}to learn where in her visual | field Cheri sees flashes.
{28417}{28451}MAN: Now.
{28456}{28509}ROBERTSON: Oh, wow. | That was right there.
{28514}{28555}Okay.
{28560}{28611}NARRATOR: | When she sees a flash,
{28616}{28726}Cheri points to top, bottom, | left' or right.
{28731}{28767}[ Beeping ]
{28844}{28962}With every electrode mapped, | the doctors connect the camera'
{28967}{29018}making certain that what it sees
{29023}{29090}matches the flashes | in Cheri's brain.
{29095}{29160}ROBERTSON: | Yeah. Right in the same spot.
{29231}{29286}So it works for us.
{29336}{29404}NARRATOR: Finally, | with the camera mounted,
{29409}{29535}Cheri's mother helps connect the | gear to try the new settings.
{29583}{29627}WOMAN: Ready?
{29632}{29682}l think my computer | gained weight.
{29687}{29724}[ Laughs ]
{29809}{29910}NARRATOR: Has technology helped | bring Cheri's sight back?
{30029}{30074}Oh!
{30096}{30136}Wow!
{30180}{30222}Oh, wow.
{30227}{30292}[ Laughs ] | Oh, wow.
{30309}{30420}When l finally saw my first | light' it took my breath away.
{30425}{30474}l could not believe it.
{30479}{30530}We knew it worked,
{30535}{30608}and that was very, | very thrilling for me.
{30613}{30670}Oh, something's lighting me up.
{30690}{30785}NARRATOR: | We can't know what Cheri sees.
{30790}{30854}But we do know | what she describes.
{30925}{31007}Whoa. l'm seeing | two big dots of light.
{31012}{31104}And they are white with | a little bit of red in them.
{31138}{31250}Wow. Those were two really big | flashes, and they moved.
{31275}{31370}Wow. l saw a big flash | of light there.
{31405}{31453}NARRATOR: | This early in the project'
{31458}{31553}doctors have activated | only some of Cheri's electrodes.
{31558}{31643}Eventually, they hope to connect | many more,
{31648}{31718}vastly improving the scope | of her vision.
{31723}{31758}Oh, wow.
{31790}{31885}Because l can only use 1 0 | of my electrodes,
{31890}{31973}whenever an object goes | in front of my camera'
{31978}{32049}l will see two flashes of light.
{32054}{32146}And they're about the size | of a big peanut M&M --
{32151}{32214}just one on top of the other.
{32219}{32291}Saw a couple more. | l'm not sure if it's the waves.
{32296}{32380}And that way, l know | that there is an object there.
{32385}{32453}Now, l'm not sure what it is.
{32458}{32513}They're sailboats?
{32541}{32596}ls that it still here?
{32601}{32653}That is cool.
{32674}{32782}When l am able to use | all of my electrodes, however'
{32787}{32816}l will be able to see
{32821}{32877}the outlines of things | l'm looking at.
{32882}{33069}So l'll know if l'm looking | at a tree or a person or a car.
{33074}{33165}So l'll actually know | what l'm looking at.
{33208}{33306}NARRATOR: No one pretends | that Cheri's vision is back.
{33311}{33402}But the fact she can sense | any of the visual world
{33407}{33488}makes her | an extraordinary pioneer.
{33511}{33611}l magine if one day we could feed | complete vision signals
{33616}{33659}directly to the brain.
{33664}{33714}What could we see?
{33719}{33802}We might see a world | that we've been blind to,
{33807}{33897}as if we were seeing | through night-vision lenses,
{33902}{34001}infrared cameras, | even X-ray vision.
{34089}{34140}l magine a sum mer weekend
{34145}{34241}on a California beach | dense with bodies.
{34300}{34392}But for one onlooker' | this seemingly calm scene
{34397}{34484}may be a series of accidents | waiting to happen.
{34595}{34637}How does a lifeguard know
{34642}{34704}when a raised arm means, | " l need help "'
{34709}{34791}not' "Hey, this is fun"?
{35141}{35222}The guard's skill at spotting | that one desperate person
{35227}{35306}among thousands is phenomenal,
{35311}{35384}truly testing his sight | and understanding.
{35618}{35749}We see the way we do so we can | spot danger to ourselves.
{35754}{35798}l call!
{35803}{35879}NARRATOR: But nothing | is threatening the lifeguard.
{35989}{36027}l n fact' the eye,
{36032}{36102}observing a harmless pattern | across its view,
{36107}{36160}normally relaxes.
{36190}{36275}Motion-sensing rod cells | switch off
{36280}{36378}when they detect action | that's consistent and constant.
{36556}{36635}So the lifeguard | has to trick his eyes.
{36711}{36761}He does this by scanning,
{36766}{36859}forcing his eyes to lock | onto small details.
{36864}{36940}TU RN ER: Our frontline defense | are the tower guards.
{36945}{37008}Their job is to scan the water'
{37013}{37125}so their eyes are moving | across the water
{37130}{37222}and letting their brain filter | out that information they see,
{37227}{37268}looking for something wrong,
{37273}{37403}looking for that odd one out | that truly is in danger.
{37476}{37586}NARRATOR: Taking in all | this information is hard work.
{37591}{37712}Human sight has only two degrees | of detail vision at the center.
{37790}{37900}To check the whole beach, | the lifeguard sweeps...
{37962}{38039}...jumping from point to point | for detail.
{38106}{38192}Each jump is called a saccade.
{38197}{38309}A saccade is the movement | that the eyes make together
{38314}{38370}when they're looking directly | at one thing
{38375}{38450}and all of a sudden, | they look at something else.
{38455}{38571}We have mechanisms that wire | the muscles that move our eyes
{38576}{38609}to the image.
{38614}{38721}And we can quickly lock | onto a new image all at once.
{38833}{38917}NARRATOR: The saccade function | lets him jump visually
{38922}{38990}from each potential risk | to the next.
{39006}{39076}He repeatedly scans | his field of vision,
{39081}{39175}updating his visual memory | every few seconds.
{39180}{39312}But even more is going on as | he uses another complex skill --
{39317}{39365}interpretation of detail.
{39370}{39404}KAF ORD: | Being a seasoned lifeguard,
{39409}{39499}l can recognize distressed | victims in the water'
{39504}{39564}whether they look | really labored,
{39569}{39644}whether they're comfortable | or not' by their body language.
{39649}{39679}Those are sort of indicators
{39684}{39767}that allow you to recognize | a rescue before it happens.
{39847}{39905}NARRATOR: | The muscles rotating our eyes
{39910}{39981}give us an astounding breadth | of view.
{39999}{40057}Even while perfectly still,
{40062}{40158}we can rotate our eyes | from far left to far right
{40163}{40214}in a quarter of a second.
{40327}{40405}So when a riptide | suddenly overcomes a swim mer'
{40410}{40486}Drew knows within moments.
{40868}{40988}Now he has to judge whether the | swim mer can get back to shore,
{40993}{41067}whether he's too far out | for a rescue attempt'
{41072}{41140}or whether' despite the riptide,
{41145}{41199}Drew has a chance | of reaching him.
{41204}{41323}That split-second call demands | an accurate sense of distance.
{41375}{41485}We have two eyes, and they're | separated by this distance,
{41490}{41546}and that permits each image
{41551}{41668}to be slightly different | than the other image.
{41673}{41728}And that slight dissimilarity
{41733}{41843}gives me a sense | of how far away something is.
{42027}{42116}NARRATOR: We constantly judge | shifting distances,
{42121}{42197}hardly giving the process | a thought.
{42202}{42270}But this special process | only occurs
{42275}{42379}in humans and other predators | for spotting and catching prey.
{42523}{42583}That's the hunting skill | the lifeguard uses
{42588}{42666}to home in | on the struggling swim mer.
{42928}{43016}We can all find the detail | we need in a busy scene
{43021}{43073}when it's for our own safety.
{43128}{43194}But when guarding the lives | of others,
{43199}{43345}that same skill requires | training and intense focus.
{43382}{43525}l n day-to-day life, we fill in | parts of the passing picture
{43530}{43629}as our visual memory | makes shortcuts and assumptions,
{43634}{43721}putting together a picture of | the world that seems complete.
{43800}{43910}What happens when | those assumptions prove wrong?
{43942}{44048}That's where we get the phrase | "smoke and mirrors "'
{44053}{44137}the tools of visual confusion | illusionists use
{44142}{44249}to exploit the science of sight | to fool our vision.
{44463}{44592}Movies present spectacular | sights and grand illusions.
{44737}{44837}This is a movie set' | but how big?
{44842}{44918}[ Alarm blaring ]
{44923}{45036}What looks like a space station | on an alien planet...
{45041}{45091}MAN: Cut!
{45096}{45145}NARRATOR: | ... is a trick.
{45197}{45240}WOMAN: | 68 "B "' take 1.
{45300}{45357}NARRATOR: | A tiny model near the camera
{45362}{45456}and a full-size stage | further away.
{45480}{45571}Film makers are essentially | the masters of illusion.
{45588}{45640}Here we see the two actors.
{45645}{45697}We assume | they're in a massive set'
{45702}{45744}because we don't have | the ability
{45749}{45777}to think' "Hold on a second.
{45782}{45832}This is just a small set' | and the actors
{45837}{45896}are a considerable distance | away from it."
{45901}{45939}MAN: Cut!
{45944}{46019}visual illusions trip up | the perceptual system,
{46024}{46092}the system | that is normally right.
{46097}{46155}Here we're exploiting | the loopholes,
{46160}{46235}when suddenly, | we're very, very wrong.
{46319}{46425}NARRATOR: l llusions exploit | how we see the world.
{46493}{46587}They rely on the difference | between what the eye sees
{46592}{46675}and what the brain understands.
{46680}{46800}Magicians have always relied | on this delicate confusion.
{46852}{46875}Hi, there.
{46909}{46961}[ Echoing ] | l'm Marco Tempest.
{46966}{47024}l'm a magician.
{47029}{47126}Now, here's a little | optical illusion.
{47131}{47231}Now, let me show you just | how easy it is to fool the eye.
{47236}{47314}l have a three-dimensional | object right here.
{47319}{47403}And l also have | a two-dimensional object'
{47408}{47449}this paper disk.
{47454}{47538}Now, if l place | this three-dimensional object
{47543}{47603}next to | the two-dimensional object'
{47608}{47669}something very strange | is happening.
{47674}{47721}Check this out.
{47792}{47834}lt looks like
{47839}{47931}the two-dimensional object | has become three-dimensional.
{47936}{48024}But if we get rid | of the three-dimensional object'
{48029}{48090}something else is happening.
{48134}{48179}Check this out.
{48202}{48244}Do you see?
{48249}{48448}The cube now looks like | it's completely two-dimensional.
{48596}{48644}All right. | Here we go.
{48649}{48760}NARRATOR: From another angle, | the secrets reveal themselves.
{48784}{48845}l also have | a two-dimensional object'
{48850}{48919}this paper disk right here.
{48924}{48958}Now, if l place the...
{48963}{49006}NARRATOR: | Underlying the trick
{49011}{49080}is a genuine | scientific principle,
{49085}{49130}explaining how our brains
{49135}{49208}build a three-dimensional | visual world.
{49213}{49255}Check this out.
{49274}{49363}This is all about | how we read perspective.
{49368}{49407}The three-dimensional cube,
{49412}{49472}once established as being | three-dimensional,
{49477}{49543}stays three-dimensional | in our minds.
{49548}{49606}Even when we look | at the taped lines,
{49611}{49679}it still looks three-dimensional | to us.
{49684}{49812}lt's almost like our eye | fills in the missing information
{49817}{49907}and wants the object | to be three-dimensional.
{49912}{49949}And that's where l get you.
{49954}{49987}All right.
{50031}{50132}NARRATOR: Our world is filled | with visual information.
{50174}{50284}The brain copes | by creating shortcuts,
{50289}{50410}relying on experience to fill | gaps with informed guesswork.
{50501}{50549}Light and shadow.
{50600}{50696}The size, shape, and distance | of objects.
{50786}{50905}We assume the world operates | according to fixed rules.
{50964}{51047}But sometimes | we're just plain wrong.
{51167}{51251}Take this ordinary-looking room.
{51288}{51355}l look to be much, much larger | than Sarah.
{51360}{51403}And this isn't camera trickery.
{51408}{51478}l nstead, | it's an incredible illusion.
{51498}{51555}Because when l'm in this corner'
{51560}{51642}Sarah suddenly looks much, | much larger than me.
{51647}{51752}Now, in reality, the two of us | are roughly the same size.
{51757}{51822}lt's all to do | with the amazing way
{51827}{51901}in which this room | has been constructed.
{51947}{51999}NARRATOR: | Not regular in shape at all,
{52004}{52136}the room has a bizarre geometry | that's disguised as normal.
{52225}{52294}We see square rooms so often...
{52333}{52441}...we fool ourselves | into thinking this is one, too.
{52505}{52597}lt's amazing | how easily our eyes get fooled.
{52602}{52786}We see an umbrella' and we | im mediately think of rain.
{52791}{52876}But on a beautiful day | like today...
{52925}{53057}[ Echoing ]...we don't | really need an umbrella.
{53087}{53178}NARRATOR: Magicians exploit more | than our assumptions
{53183}{53257}about the objects and spaces | around us.
{53297}{53409}You're about to see | what looks like a simple trick.
{53414}{53503}But it has a deeper' | more elusive level.
{53517}{53595}Welcome to the color-changing | card trick'
{53600}{53672}using this blue-back deck | of cards.
{53677}{53722}Now, the idea is very simple.
{53727}{53793}l'm just going to spread | the cards in front of Sarah
{53798}{53904}and ask her to push any card | towards the front of the table.
{53940}{53969}SARAH: Okay.
{53974}{54092}l'm going to go for | this card here.
{54097}{54127}Wl SEMAN: | Excellent.
{54132}{54215}Sarah could've chosen | any of the cards in the deck'
{54220}{54263}but she selected the one
{54268}{54334}which is now laying facedown | on the table.
{54339}{54384}l'm going to ask her | to look at the card
{54389}{54444}and tell us what it is.
{54506}{54598}The card l chose was, in fact' | the 3 of clubs.
{54603}{54645}Wl SEMAN: | The 3 of clubs. Excellent.
{54650}{54706}That comes back into the deck.
{54711}{54811}l'm now going to spread | the cards faceup on the table.
{54816}{54855}A click of the fingers,
{54860}{54966}and Sarah's card | still has a blue back.
{54971}{55012}What's more surprising
{55017}{55134}is that all of the other cards | now have red backs.
{55139}{55243}And that is the amazing | color-changing card trick.
{55285}{55385}NARRATOR: But this trick really | doesn't involve cards at all.
{55426}{55467}lt clearly shows
{55472}{55533}how the brain picks up | only a tiny bit
{55538}{55614}of the available | visual information.
{55679}{55748}l n fact' | as the trick was occurring,
{55753}{55822}four other color changes | went on.
{56020}{56079}Welcome to the color-changing | card trick'
{56084}{56154}using this blue-back deck | of cards.
{56159}{56286}NARRATOR: As the trick unfolds, | the camera stays on the cards.
{56291}{56348}...which is now laying facedown | on the table.
{56353}{56403}NARRATOR: | Most of us don't notice changes
{56408}{56490}in clothing and background | made off-camera.
{56515}{56596}The color-changing card trick | exploits this idea
{56601}{56640}that we have a very good idea
{56645}{56704}of what's happening | right in front of our eyes.
{56709}{56796}l n fact' 90% of that information | we're just not seeing.
{56801}{56836}lt doesn't feel like that.
{56841}{56882}lt feels like, | as we look around,
{56887}{56939}we're perceiving the whole | of the world.
{56944}{56979}That's not the case.
{56984}{57079}We really are only just focused | on a tiny, tiny area.
{57135}{57250}NARRATOR: l llusions are about | more than entertainment.
{57255}{57315}They reveal how what we see
{57320}{57388}depends on assumptions | our brains make.
{57584}{57736}Our eyes and brain collaborate | to make sense of the world.
{57774}{57851}But our brains need years | of training
{57856}{57926}before they can turn | what our eyes see
{57931}{58022}into a meaningful image | in an instant.
{58170}{58301}F ollow a blind man as he uses | his eyes for the first time,
{58306}{58408}and hear him describe | what his brain can see.
{58597}{58683}Michael May has undergone | radical surgery
{58688}{58781}to repair eyes ruined | in a boyhood accident.
{58877}{58952}He hopes that when | the bandages come off'
{58957}{59081}he'll be able to see | for the first time in 40 years.
{59219}{59264}MAY: l didn't expect | anything to happen
{59269}{59327}for at least a couple of weeks.
{59332}{59451}So to go into that room and | have the bandages peeled back
{59456}{59571}and then to actually | see light coming in
{59576}{59657}was more than words | can really describe.
{59805}{59878}All of a sudden, | there's the overwhelming whoosh
{59883}{59960}of visual input'
{59965}{60073}things resolving into colors | and shapes,
{60078}{60149}images whooshing everywhere.
{60250}{60319}NARRATOR: | Rebuilt eyes allow light
{60324}{60394}to reach Michael's retinas.
{60486}{60559}First thing you should see | is your wife.
{60564}{60623}NARRATOR: | But Michael has a problem.
{60640}{60690}After 40 years in the dark'
{60695}{60799}his brain doesn't recognize | what his eyes can see.
{60804}{60957}vision wasn't as simple | as just turning on the sight
{60962}{61031}and all of a sudden | being able to read a book.
{61036}{61093}lt's much more complicated | than that.
{61098}{61180}vision isn't something | where you flip a switch.
{61185}{61220}Come here, baby.
{61225}{61309}NARRATOR: So, what visual sense | will Michael have
{61314}{61398}of a world he hasn't seen | in 40 years?
{61549}{61593}Once blind,
{61598}{61713}Michael May's repaired eyes | now work almost perfectly.
{61718}{61817}But surprisingly, | he can hardly see.
{61894}{61989}The reason is the age | at which Michael lost his sight.
{62074}{62170}A freak chemical explosion | at age 3 blinded him.
{62175}{62237}[ Monitor beeping ]
{62242}{62334}40 years later' he underwent | an experimental procedure
{62339}{62389}to restore his sight.
{62394}{62457}Doctors replaced a key part | of the eye
{62462}{62540}destroyed in the accident' | his cornea.
{62562}{62651}This clear' paper-thin coating | protects the eye
{62656}{62711}and helps it focus.
{62780}{62826}The damage to Michael's eyes
{62831}{62901}kept him from making out | anything.
{62945}{62987}He hoped that new corneas
{62992}{63070}would mean another chance | to see the world.
{63075}{63130}...you should see is your wife.
{63151}{63210}NARRATOR: | But 40 years of blindness
{63215}{63287}left him with a larger problem.
{63385}{63489}MAY: l was trying to | latch on to images
{63494}{63545}and make sense of the world.
{63568}{63616}lt wasn't as though l saw a face
{63621}{63689}and said, "Oh, that's a smile "' | automatically.
{63694}{63791}l had to intellectualize | this whole process,
{63796}{63843}dissect it' | and then figure it out.
{63885}{63984}NARRATOR: Michael May has | no visual memory of the world.
{63989}{64056}Are you making a funny face?
{64098}{64163}NARRATOR: lt's not something | we're born with.
{64168}{64252}At birth, | everything we see is new,
{64257}{64309}but we archive the images,
{64314}{64376}learning their content | and meaning.
{64381}{64480}We build our visual memory | through experience.
{64535}{64583}At the back of the brain,
{64588}{64703}over half a billion brain cells | make up our visual cortex'
{64708}{64784}the processor and storehouse | for vision.
{64816}{64908}Early in our lives, | we build our visual memory.
{64913}{64964}And as long as we live,
{64969}{65072}that library helps us | make sense of the world.
{65133}{65170}SADU N : | The interpretation
{65175}{65240}and therefore the recognition | of certain things
{65245}{65297}takes a tremendous amount | of experience.
{65302}{65364}l n this sense, | the brain is learning to see.
{65369}{65434}And this is taking place | over the first six years
{65439}{65511}or' to a smaller extent' | even the first nine years.
{65626}{65687}NARRATOR: But when Michael | was blinded at 3,
{65692}{65765}he'd only just started | to understand the things
{65770}{65840}that make up his ability | to see.
{66091}{66205}Size, shape, and distance, | light and shade.
{66298}{66459}MAY: ls that a curb, a step | down, a step up, or a shadow?
{66464}{66583}Just in terms of the brain's | ability to analyze the depth,
{66588}{66690}to see the edge and to realize | that there's a 6-inch drop
{66695}{66834}to the curb, l'm just not able | to perceive that information.
{66851}{66953}lf he had spent | a childhood seeing
{66958}{66990}and playing with his bicycle
{66995}{67060}and riding off curbs | of different sizes,
{67065}{67127}he would have learned subtle, | different cues
{67132}{67164}that lets him distinguish
{67169}{67236}between a 3-inch curb | at one distance,
{67241}{67293}a 6-inch curb a little further'
{67298}{67371}and a 9-inch curb | further than that.
{67376}{67417}Deprived of that experience,
{67422}{67510}it gets to be very hard to do so | on an optical basis alone.
{67535}{67613}NARRATOR: Now Michael's | adult brain has to struggle
{67618}{67704}to catch up on the learning | it missed as a child.
{67709}{67806}But Michael does recognize | and enjoy some things.
{67811}{67916}MAY: l'll use a cane to deal | with what's in front of me.
{67921}{67953}And then l can look around
{67958}{68050}and appreciate the things | that l can perceive --
{68055}{68188}bright-colored flowers, | landmarks, people walking by --
{68193}{68267}things like that | that l can use my vision for.
{68272}{68347}And l don't even think | about what's in front of me.
{68371}{68449}NARRATOR: Michael May inhabits | a weird world
{68454}{68515}between blindness and sight'
{68520}{68615}frustrated by his lack | of visual memory.
{68715}{68795}F or most of us, | this same visual memory
{68800}{68914}unlocks another universe, | the world of dreams.
{69179}{69268}When you're in a dream, | that is your reality.
{69273}{69343}You visually are seeing things. | You are hearing things.
{69348}{69394}You can literally feel things.
{69399}{69473}You can see your body moving, | et cetera.
{69478}{69518}And you can experience anything
{69523}{69592}that you would experience | in waking life in a dream.
{69613}{69684}NARRATOR: Dreams consist | of images we've collected
{69689}{69720}with our eyes.
{69725}{69830}Like a film editor' | the brain reassembles them.
{69943}{70015}M l LLER: l'm usually | on my stomach with my arms out'
{70020}{70054}kind of like Superman,
{70059}{70145}and l'm gliding | over different sceneries.
{70150}{70274}l find it a bit of a high to go | in between, dodge the buildings,
{70279}{70358}and go fast | and go up and down and over.
{70398}{70509}l feel like a bird soaring | in the air.
{70514}{70571}l've always wished l could fly.
{70588}{70702}NARRATOR: l nterestingly, many | people share the dream of flying
{70707}{70803}and endure the nightmare | of being pursued.
{70826}{70913}The brain can create | utterly realistic scenes,
{70918}{70974}even though | we've never experienced them.
{71019}{71059}WOMAN : | Someone's following me,
{71064}{71143}and l have this urge | to just run away.
{71148}{71240}MAN : l started running away | from it' seeking higher ground.
{71245}{71290}WOMAN #2 : | He was faster than me.
{71295}{71369}WOMAN #3: But l ran into | the back door of the hospital.
{71374}{71467}NARRATOR: Reports of such bad | dreams recur throughout history,
{71472}{71521}and the meaning | of these night visions
{71526}{71595}has always fascinated us.
{71620}{71754}3,000 years ago, the Egyptians | compiled a book of dreams.
{71759}{71808}lt listed familiar dream images
{71813}{71874}and offered interpretations | of them.
{71879}{71950}DR. PARKl NSON : | Dreams were a sort of moment
{71955}{72061}when the boundaries between | this world and the next world
{72066}{72106}seemed very thin.
{72140}{72204}But for many of the dreams | in the dream book'
{72209}{72313}it's clearly a search for | what will happen in the future.
{72377}{72449}NARRATOR: Now we explain | bad dreams as useful
{72454}{72573}in helping us conquer deep, | often universal fears,
{72578}{72697}just as we see good dreams | as fulfilling our fantasies.
{72719}{72794}Sights seen in dreams | may well connect us
{72799}{72894}to our ancestors' instincts | and fears --
{72899}{72982}yet another example | of how our sense of vision
{72987}{73079}has always dominated our lives.
{73520}{73613}Our visual system shows | better than any other
{73618}{73698}how intricately our bodies work.
{73755}{73862}Throughout history, it has | supercharged human development'
{73867}{73970}and it could allow us | to take charge of our future.
{73999}{74081}Sight dates back | to our deep past --
{74086}{74224}unsung, unnoticed, | a faculty we take for granted.
{74229}{74368}But when revealed, sight shows | how everyday life depends on it.
{74422}{74582}Pushed to the limits, we can see | the superhero inside us all,
{74587}{74629}the human body.
39526
Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.