Thanks.  The constant eye movement and the fovea being so small does sound
like a good physio-type answer. I had considered the idea that we do have
one and I just have not tested it in dark conditions to really see it.


Rick Stevens
School of Behavioral and Social Sciences
University of Louisiana at Monroe



On Fri, Sep 7, 2018 at 1:53 PM Carol DeVolder <devoldercar...@gmail.com>
wrote:

>
> Just a quick response--in some respects, we do have that blind spot, which
> is why you can't look directly at a dim star at night if you want to see
> it. Furthermore, our eyes are never still, so even if we are looking at
> something, there is enough jitter for the foveal area to be filled in. The
> fovea is pretty darned small, as well. Also, memory is an amazing
> contributor to perception.
> Happy Friday,
> Carol
>
>
> On Fri, Sep 7, 2018 at 1:47 PM Rick Stevens <stevens.r...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>>
>> TIPS had been quiet lately.  A question occurred to me when talking about
>> rod vs cone functioning.
>>
>> When light levels get low, the cones lose function.  Since the fovea is
>> 100% cones, why don't we have a blind spot in the center of our vision in
>> low light, low enough to lose color, but still enough light to move around
>> in a dark room.  While the blind spots of right and left eyes can be
>> 'filled in' by information from the other eye, I would think that the
>> foveas would be aimed at exactly the same spot.
>>
>> My first thought would be the memory of looking close to some spot,
>> getting the information with the rods and remembering it when shifting my
>> gaze to that spot.  I know memory stuff better than physiology stuff, so I
>> thought that there might be a better or at least a more physio-oriented
>> answer.
>>
>> Rick Stevens
>> School of Behavioral and Social Sciences
>> University of Louisiana at Monroe
>>
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