‘Visual clutter’ alters information flow in the brain | Yale News
Too much stuff in the periphery of our vision can make it difficult to identify what we’re seeing. Yale researchers now know how that clutter affects the brain.
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March 7, 2026
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Grade 9 (Freshman)–Grade 12 (Senior)
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Introduction
Visual Clutter and Brain Information Processing
- Core Finding: A study published in Neuron (Oct. 22) reveals that "visual clutter" alters the efficiency of information flow within the brain's primary visual cortex.
- Visual Crowding: The study explores why humans struggle to identify objects in peripheral vision (e.g., reading out of the corner of the eye). The location of clutter relative to a target significantly impacts perception.
- Methodology: Researchers recorded neural activity in the primary visual cortex of macaque monkeys while they fixated on a central point amidst various visual stimuli.
- The "Phone Tree" Analogy: Clutter does not change the order in which neurons relay information, but it significantly impacts the efficiency and strength of the signal being passed between neurons.
- New Discovery: The study identified that subunits within larger visual areas perform their own independent computations and relay specific subsets of information to other subunits, rather than just passing along a final output.
- Future Research: The team plans to investigate how "attention" allows the brain to compensate for visual clutter, specifically how we can perceive objects of interest even when they are outside our direct line of sight (e.g., while driving).
- Key Personnel: Co-senior authors include Anirvan Nandy (Yale School of Medicine) and Monika Jadi (Yale School of Medicine). The study was funded by the National Eye Institute.
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