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Why correctional officers need to watch more than the hands

If we truly fixate on the hands, are we giving up focus on other body and behavior cues that might give us earlier warning of non-compliance?

By Joel Shults, C1 Contributor

The human eye and vision system is about 97 percent illusion. Only a small range of vision is undistorted on the retina — and even that is upside down! The rest is the brain’s work of knitting together an image that makes sense.

The reason that you don’t see a blur as you follow the path of a hockey puck, that you don’t notice the temporary blindness of your eye blinking, and that you’re not consciously aware of the millions of stimuli entering your visual sense, is the magical work of the brain.

Although we think we see things instantaneously, each focus requires brain processing and as we look from side to side the movement takes time. The brain not only creates your image of the world, but its interpretation as well. Whether a smile is fake or sincere, and whether an arrestee is truly complying or just stalling for time to make his move are based on the observer’s experience.