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June 25, 2006

To: Researcher44 "at" http://VisionAndPsychosisdotNet
Sent: Saturday, June 24, 2006 4:18 AM
Subject: Guestbook Comments

 
Hello.  I was perusing the Rick Ross LGAT forum and noticed your post and link to your website on SPVP.  I work in an office environment with cubicles that situate each employee's computer at the desk corner with desktop space on each side of the computer corner.  Our cubicle walls/partitions are quite high so we cannot see other employees on the other side of the walls.  However there are 4 of us in each cubicle "box", all facing away from one another.  I experience no distraction, disturbance, or annoyance from my co-workers who are directly adjacent to me on the right and left.  However, my co-worker who is directly behind me diagonally is quite irritating to me.  He also is rather fidgety...but in a quiet way.  It's like he knows he is restless so tries to go about his restlessness in a quiet way so as not to disturb others, but he does (me anyway).  I seem to always feel his presence behind and to the sides of me and I find myself increasingly irritated.  Plus he is always there (workaholic) and I get no break from him.
 
I am not normally the kind of person to get so irritated by outside input...I usually am very good at filtering out distractions and staying focused on my own task at hand.  But this fellow really makes my blood boil and my nerves edgy.  Do you think this is due to intrusions on my SPV?
 
Thank you...extremely fascinating website.
 
Tristan

Reply

 

My site is about visual Subliminal Distraction. Your annoying cubicle partner must actually move backward to the point that he or she enters your subliminal peripheral vision from behind to cause exposure. (..repeat enter your subliminal vision...you must be in a state of mental investment to the point that you dissociate things happening around you.)

Go to the Space Station page to see illustrations.

But audio subliminal distraction does exist. You may be unaware you are actually hearing the person while you are concentrating and deep in thought.

Subliminally perceived sounds cannot trigger peripheral vision reflexes. Therefore you cannot be exposed to the problem on my site by sound.

Larry

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Prevention:  This  section is now repeated at the bottom of most pages.

The rare occurrence of the injury establishes that is difficult to create enough exposure to cause an injury. But when it does happen the consequences are serious, possibly fatal.

 Our personal experience was intermittent human traffic during eight-hour workdays for thirty calendar days.

If you have a tower CPU mount it under your desk. That's the way they position it in a cubicle. The hard drive busy light is about the height of your low peripheral vision if you put the tower on the desk. Desktop reading of text or writing notes beside the keyboard on the side of the monitor away from the tower makes the blinking hard drive busy light appear to approach from behind when you turn to view the screen again.

If you have a computer work station/desk in which you turn ninety degrees to write or do other non computer work, turn off the monitor when you turn aside. Remove screen savers in this instance. The movement, animation for example, in your screensaver, two-dimensional movement, might well be detected by your peripheral vision at close range. Alternately cover the monitor screen.

All home, apartment, or dorm computer workstations are in unprotected workspace. To change that put the computer in a quiet room with no possible movement. If that is not possible in a dorm or apartment position the computer so that your peripheral vision can see only stationary walls as you use the computer in a busy room. In Cubicles and 'Systems Furniture' these protective features are achieved with peripheral vision blocking panels and corner seating positions. It is called 'Cubicle Level Protection.'

If you use computer or CD-ROM games for many hours day after day, the game playing position should follow the same rules as the computer workstation. Battery operated games will not run long enough on a single rechargeable battery to cause a risk for SPVP.

Although a laptop does not have a visible blinking light in peripheral vision the same rules apply to your work position.  There should not be human traffic moving to you from behind. There should be nothing behind you, which could enter your subliminal peripheral vision field as you turn your head while working at the laptop and be mistaken for threat movement.

Only movement coming from behind you into your Subliminal Peripheral Vision can cause a peripheral vision reflex. If the movement source approaches you from ahead then enters your Subliminal Peripheral Vision from conscious sight there can be no peripheral vision reflex.

 

Repeated for Emphasis:

A single session or rare sessions will not cause this problem.

It is the same day after day long hours of play or computer use with detectable movement in ‘Subliminal Peripheral Vision,’ which would form the basis of a risk for SPVP injury.

Exposure can be cumulative 

The brain’s detection system only evaluates movement. There is little recognition of the nature of the object in peripheral vision. If you have several hours exposure from human traffic at the library, while reading at an open table or seated in a reading room chair, followed by long hours watching TV with a critically misplaced ceiling fan sweeping detectable shadows around the room, the combination of those two behaviors might cause the problem. The suggestion is that either activity alone would not consume enough exposure time even if the critical movement is present.

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