Friends
Here is an interesting piece from
www.edge.org<http://www.edge.org>
Don't know whether it is off topic or not, but I did correlate it with the idea 
of sensory substitution which may find application in devices like Brainport 
and functional utility of sensory input rather than its perceived value as 
absolute truth which is hardly  intuitive:


Sensory desktop
Donald D. Hoffman <http://edge.org/memberbio/donald_d_hoffman>

Cognitive Scientist, UC, Irvine; Author, Visual Intelligence...
Our perceptions are neither true nor false. Instead, our perceptions of space 
and time and objects, the fragrance of a rose, the tartness of a lemon, are all 
a part of our "sensory desktop," which functions much like a computer desktop.
Graphical desktops for personal computers have existed for about three decades. 
Yet they are now such an integral part of daily life that we might easily 
overlook a useful concept that they embody. A graphical desktop is a guide to 
adaptive behavior. Computers are notoriously complex devices, more complex than 
most of us care to learn. The colors, shapes and locations of icons on a 
desktop shield us from the computer's complexity, and yet they allow us to 
harness its power by appropriately informing our behaviors, such as mouse 
movements and button clicks, that open, delete and otherwise manipulate files. 
In this way, a graphical desktop is a guide to adaptive behavior.
Graphical desktops make it easier to grasp the idea that guiding adaptive 
behavior is different than reporting truth. A red icon on a desktop does not 
report the true color of the file it represents. Indeed, a file has no color. 
Instead, the red color guides adaptive behavior, perhaps by signaling the 
relative importance or recent updating of the file. The graphical desktop 
guides useful behavior, and hides what is true but not useful. The complex 
truth about the computer's logic gates and magnetic fields is, for the purposes 
of most users, of no use.
Graphical desktops thus make it easier to grasp the nontrivial difference 
between utility and truth. Utility drives evolution by natural selection. 
Grasping the distinction between utility and truth is therefore critical to 
understanding a major force that shapes our bodies, minds and sensory 
experiences.
Consider, for instance, facial attractiveness. When we glance at a face we get 
an immediate feeling of its attractiveness, a feeling that usually falls 
somewhere between hot and not. That feeling can inspire poetry, evoke disgust, 
or launch a thousand ships. It certainly influences dating and mating. Research 
in evolutionary psychology suggests that this feeling of attractiveness is a 
guide to adaptive behavior. The behavior is mating, and the initial feeling of 
attractiveness towards a person is an adaptive guide because it correlates with 
the likelihood that mating with that person will lead to successful offspring.
Just as red does not report the true color of a file, so hotness does not 
report the true feeling of attractiveness of a face: Files have no intrinsic 
color, faces have no intrinsic feeling of attractiveness. The color of an icon 
is an artificial convention to represent aspects of the utility of a colorless 
file. The initial feeling of attractiveness is an artificial convention to 
represent mate utility.
The phenomenon of synesthesia can help to understand the conventional nature of 
our sensory experiences. In many cases of synesthesia, a stimulus that is 
normally experienced in one way, say as a sound, is also automatically 
experienced in another way, say as a color. Someone with sound-color 
synesthesia sees colors and simple shapes whenever they hear a sound. The same 
sound always occurs with the same colors and shapes. Someone with taste-touch 
synesthesia feels touch sensations in their hands every time they taste 
something with their mouth. The same taste always occurs with the same feeling 
of touch in their hands. The particular connections between sound and color 
that one sound-color synesthete experiences typically differ from the 
connections experienced by another such synesthete. In this sense, the 
connections are an arbitrary convention. Now imagine a sound-color synesthete 
who no longer has sound experiences to acoustic stimuli, and instead has only 
their synesthetic color experiences. Then this synesthete would only experience 
as colors what the rest of us experience as sounds. In principle they could get 
all the acoustic information the rest of us get, only in a color format rather 
than a sound format.
This leads to the concept of a sensory desktop. Our sensory experiences, such 
as vision, sound, taste and touch, can all be thought of as sensory desktops 
that have evolved to guide adaptive behavior, not to report objective truths. 
As a result, we should take our sensory experiences seriously. If something 
tastes putrid, we probably shouldn't eat it. If it sounds like a rattlesnake, 
we probably should avoid it. Our sensory experiences have been shaped by 
natural selection to guide such adaptive behaviors.
We must take our sensory experiences seriously, but not literally. This is one 
place where the concept of a sensory desktop is helpful. We take the icons on a 
graphical desktop seriously; we won't, for instance, carelessly drag an icon to 
the trash, for fear of losing a valuable file. But we don't take the colors, 
shapes or locations of the icons literally. They are not there to resemble the 
truth. They are there to facilitate useful behaviors.
Sensory desktops differ across species. A face that could launch a thousand 
ships probably has no attraction to a macaque monkey. The rotting carrion that 
tastes putrid to me might taste like a delicacy to a vulture. My taste 
experience guides behaviors appropriate for me: Eating rotten carrion could 
kill me. The vulture's taste experience guides behaviors appropriate to it: 
Carrion is its primary food source.
Much of evolution by natural selection can be understood as an arms race 
between competing sensory desktops. Mimicry and camouflage exploit limitations 
in the sensory desktops of predators and prey. A mutation that alters a sensory 
desktop to reduce such exploitation conveys a selective advantage. This cycle 
of exploiting and revising sensory desktops is a creative engine of evolution.
On a personal level, the concept of a sensory desktop can enhance our cognitive 
toolkit by refining our attitude towards our own perceptions. It is common to 
assume that the way I see the world is, at least in part, the way it really is. 
Because, for instance, I experience a world of space and time and objects, it 
is common to assume that these experiences are, or at least resemble, objective 
truths. The concept of a sensory desktop reframes all this. It loosens the grip 
of sensory experiences on the imagination. Space, time and objects might just 
be aspects of a sensory desktop that is specific to Homo sapiens. They might 
not be deep insights into objective truths, just convenient conventions that 
have evolved to allow us to survive in our niche. Our desktop is just a desktop.



With thanks and regards



                                (Rajesh Asudani)
Assistant General Manager
Reserve Bank of India
Nagpur
Cell: 9420397185
o: +91 712 2806846
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It's not activity that wears out the body and spirit- it's inactivity. Keep 
going!"
GUS ECKSTEIN


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