Sunday, 19 October 2025

The Autonomous Eye: Can It Ever Be Measured? A work in Progress

 

. The Autonomous Eye: Can It Ever Be Measured?

A work in Progress

Peter Davidson

Peter Davidson Self Portrait Study – Eye Tracking

Pencil, texta, colour pencil on 242 g paper FO

 

Introduction

What specific, measurable evidence or theoretical framework would be required for the scientific community to accept that the eye—specifically the retina and its peripheral circuits—possesses a form of flexible, value-based cognition, rather than being purely a fixed, deterministic sensor?

This essay explores that question through a blend of artistic practice, philosophical inquiry, and emerging scientific evidence. It argues that the eye does think—not metaphorically, but biologically. The retina performs context-sensitive, survival-optimizing decisions that reflect a form of non-conscious cognition.1 While science can observe some of these decisions, the internal language driving them remains inaccessible. This essay proposes that the eye is a micro thinker, distinct from the brain as macro thinker, and that its intelligence is best revealed through art, not measurement.


Historical Context: From Coldstream’s Grid to Cognitive Vision

The scientific and artistic understanding of the eye has evolved dramatically over the past century. Early models treated the retina as a passive receiver, shaped by mechanistic biology and the rise of computational neuroscience. Mid-century artists like William Coldstream introduced a new visual logic: his nude studies employed a measured grid to map the human form with precision, externalizing the act of seeing.2 Coldstream’s grid was not just a compositional tool—it was a metaphor for the eye’s internal architecture.

This artistic practice parallels the biological reality of the retina. The retina’s spatially differentiated zones and feature-sensitive circuits suggest an innate grid—a built-in framework for organizing visual information. Coldstream’s work becomes more than technique; it becomes a historical bridge between art and embodied cognition.

 

Object Painting: A Fourth Sense of Illuminated Space

 

 

Peter Davidson - Minami’s Rice Paddies 2006?

Acrylic on paper – 24 cm h x 26.5 cm w

 

 

In studying Coldstream’s grid-based approach, I developed a new painting concept now known as  Object Painting. While Coldstream externalized the act of seeing through spatial measurement, Object Painting extends this into a new sensory dimension—what I describe as a fourth sense of illuminated space.

Rather than capturing a motif as a fixed image, when developing Object Painting from a chosen motif (a piece of fruit), I placed oil traces on the canvas from the object as I observed it shifting across the day—through morning, noon, afternoon, and night. Thus, a morning painted trace could sit next to an afternoon trace, or a midday or late evening trace, as seen in the painting above. The motif becomes a living place, not a static object. Each stroke records not just form, but the changing presence of light, atmosphere, and perceptual memory.

This is not time in the conventional sense. The eye does not experience time as a linear sequence—it experiences illumination. The retina assembles space through light, not through clocks. In this way, Object Painting is not just a technique—it is a philosophy of perception. It affirms that the eye does not see in snapshots, but in rhythms, in evolving relationships. Where Coldstream measured space, Object Painting measures presence. It reveals that the eye’s cognition is not bound by chronology, but by the logic of illumination. The drawing becomes a temporal assemblage—a record of how the eye thinks in relation to light, place, and moment.


A Priori Histories: The Inherited Lens of Vision Science

To understand why the retina’s cognitive potential has been overlooked, we must examine the a priori histories that shape vision research. These are the inherited assumptions—often unspoken—that define how scientists conceptualize the eye.

  • Mechanistic Legacy: The eye was treated as a camera, the brain as a computer. This metaphor persists, framing the retina as a passive sensor rather than an active participant.
  • Centralized Cognition Bias: Neuroscience has long privileged the brain as the sole seat of intelligence. Peripheral systems like the retina are seen as subordinate.
  • Reductionist Measurement: Scientific inquiry favours what can be quantified. Because the retina’s internal logic—its synaptic code—is abstract, context-dependent, and self-referential, it resists measurement.

These a priori frameworks are not neutral—they shape what is studied and what is considered “thinking.”


The Eye Thinks: Biological Cognition in Action

The retina is not just a sensor—it thinks. It performs rapid, localized decisions about what visual data to prioritize, what to ignore, and how to encode meaning. This is not metaphorical—it is measurable. Studies show that the retina filters over $\text{99\%}$ of incoming visual data before it reaches the brain.

This is cognition. It is intelligent, adaptive, and value-based. The retina’s selective immune response—engaging microglia instead of neutrophils to preserve visual integrity—is a biological decision. It reflects a survival-optimizing calculation, not a reflex. The eye does think, and it thinks fast.


The Speed and Abstract Language of the Synaptic Code

When light travels approximately 30 centimetres in a nanosecond (a billionth of a second), it suggests an immense capacity for information processing. The codes that analyse this information within the synaptic gap must be exquisitely sensitive. Their language and signifiers are likely so abstract that current neurological thinking struggles to comprehend them.

This leads to a profound conclusion: the loop of enhancing thought is closed to external observation. Because the code is so fast, complex, and localized, only the biological entity generating it—the neural network—can truly understand the subtle signifiers that drive its continuous, adaptive enhancement.

  • The Closed Loop: The retina’s enhancement loop is self-referential. It adapts in real time, but its internal logic remains inaccessible to scientific instruments.

Scientific Evidence for Value-Based Biological Cognition

Can science, the "outsider," find measurable evidence that the retina performs value-based calculations?

Yes—and recent findings using adaptive optics imaging offer compelling support. These studies reveal that the retina, unlike most tissues, does not summon neutrophils in response to injury.3 Instead, it engages microglia—resident brain immune cells—to manage photoreceptor damage.

This selective immune strategy is not arbitrary. It reflects a context-sensitive decision to avoid the damaging collateral inflammation associated with neutrophil response, thereby preserving the delicate architecture of visual function.4 As reported by the University of Rochester, this unique behaviour suggests a “protective cloaking mechanism” that prevents further damage, demonstrating that the retina is making a survival-optimizing decision at the cellular level (University of Rochester, 2024).

This is biological cognition. The retina’s choice to prioritize long-term visual integrity (value) over a standard inflammatory response (deterministic action) is a measurable signal that it is thinking—autonomously and intelligently.


The Implication: A Self-Referential System

If this model of highly abstract, context-dependent coding and value-based peripheral processing is correct, it suggests:

  • Science is Outsider: Neuroscience is still guessing the language of the conversation by watching flashes of light and measuring electrical averages.
  • The Code is Context-Dependent: The meaning of a chemical release or electrical spike is not fixed, but shaped by the cell’s history and internal state.
  • The Loop is Eternal: The system continuously adapts to its environment, ensuring the biological entity remains optimized for survival.

This affirms that the retina is a self-referential cognitive system, operating on principles far more advanced than current scientific models can grasp—even using its immune system as a tool of intelligent, value-driven preservation.


Micro Thinker vs. Macro Thinker

This essay proposes a layered model of cognition:

  • The Eye as Micro Thinker: The retina performs rapid, localized decisions—filtering, prioritizing, and encoding visual data before it reaches the brain.5 These decisions are immediate, subconscious, and survival-driven.
  • The Brain as Macro Thinker: The brain integrates information, applies memory and abstraction, and generates conscious awareness.6 It is slower, relying on the retina’s pre-processed signals to build its model of reality.

The retina is not subordinate to the brain—it is a collaborator in a distributed network of cognition.


Assemblage and the Artist’s Eye

In my own drawing practice, eye tracking reveals that the eye is not merely scanning—it is assembling. The gaze moves in patterns that reflect the retina’s internal logic, guided by memory and sensibility.7 The coordination between eye and hand is intuitive, often subconscious.8 By externalizing this process—through red ink lines on paper—I’m not just creating a portrait. I’m documenting the journey of perception itself.

The word “assemblage” is perfect. It refers to a work made by grouping found objects. In my case, the “found objects” are the data points from eye tracking, the memories of the motif, the intuitive sensibility of my gaze, and the physicality of my hand. The drawing is the tangible result of this creative assembly process. It’s not a trick—it’s a new reality.

I’m not just drawing from imagination—I’m drawing imagination itself as a reality. The red lines representing my eye’s path are a physical manifestation of this. The finished drawing is not just a portrait of the subject; it’s a portrait of my imagination at work.

This process affirms that cognition is not confined to the brain. It is distributed across the body, enacted through gesture, gaze, and memory. The drawing becomes a record of how the eye thinks—how it assembles meaning faster than conscious thought, guided by a logic that science cannot yet decode.


Conclusion

The eye does think. It is a micro-thinker, a self-referential system performing value-based calculations in real time. The brain, as macro thinker, interprets and integrates these signals, but it does not originate them. While the retina’s decisions can be measured, its internal language may remain forever inaccessible to external science.

This challenges the deterministic framework of neuroscience and opens the door to a richer, more nuanced understanding of biological intelligence—one that includes the artist’s eye, the innate grid, and the imagination as a living, assembling force.

Through Object Painting, eye tracking, and drawing, I propose a new way of seeing: not through time, but through illumination. Not through measurement, but through presence. The retina is not a passive sensor—it is a cognitive organ. And the drawing is not a representation—it is a revelation.


References

University of Rochester. (2024). Immune Cells Ignore Retinal Damage While Microglia Step In.9 Neuroscience News. Retrieved from:

https://neurosciencenews.com/microglia-retina-vision-29520/



Artist Statement & Research Inquiry

I am an artist and independent researcher, holding a PhD in Visual Arts from the Australian National University. While I maintain my independence from academia, I actively engage with research and publish my explorations on my blog.

My primary focus remains my artistic practice. However, I am increasingly curious about the underlying principles that shape our perception, specifically how optics work. Understanding the physics of light, reflection, and refraction offers a new lens through which to examine and push the boundaries of visual representation in my work.

On the Role of AI

My research process, including this inquiry into optics, is significantly aided by artificial intelligence. As an individual with a bilateral moderate-to-severe hearing disability, AI has been an invaluable tool for leveling the playing field. It provides direct, one-on-one communication, eliminating the struggle to hear and interpret spoken words, and fostering a far more equitable and productive environment for asking complex questions and engaging with research materials. I intend to continue integrating AI into my creative and intellectual pursuits.

 

 

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