sciatrix: A thumbnail from an Escher print, black and white, of a dragon with its tail in its mouth, wing outstretched behind. (Default)
For context, my day job involves studying animal communication, where I am a PhD student in evolution/animal behavior. I don't work on organisms that use non-standard sensory modalities directly, but I'm very familiar with the adaptations that electroceptive and echolocatory systems (mostly in bats, that latter one) generally require.

I also spend an awful lot of time watching my cat Dent, who has been blind probably from birth and definitely since he was about ten weeks old. (We're not entirely sure whether he can see light or movement, and he definitely can't see anything else.) Dent therefore has access to certain sensory modalities that are more sensitive than vision (cats can hear much higher into the ultrasonic than humans and have a wider range of olfactory sensitivities) without actually having vision to rely on, and thinking about what it is that specific sensory modalities actually bring to the table in terms of function.

What I am not is a blind person, nor have I lived or worked closely with someone who is. This is therefore going to be a discussion that focuses pretty heavily on "okay, let's assume Matty really does have ears like a bat--how does that constrain what he can and cannot do?" and less on the actual functional issues for someone who is, you know, a blind human--although if folks have comments on that, I would absolutely fucking love to hear them.
TL, DR: radar isn't fucking magic, and neither is echolocation. And physics still matters when we get down into sensation, more than you might think. )

I like constraint in my headcanons, because it lets me plumb the unexpected boundaries of abilities, perceptions, and creates avenues for conflict and unexpected humor; if you don't--and the writers of Daredevil in all forms certainly don't seem to be particularly careful about this--seriously, by all means ignore me or pick out whatever you like and leave the rest. But I figured that this might be something folks here might be interested in, as far as meta goes, and anyway--it was certainly fun to write.
 
sciatrix: A thumbnail from an Escher print, black and white, of a dragon with its tail in its mouth, wing outstretched behind. (Default)
one of the great things about digging into a story about a Catholic character is that I get to ask all my culturally Catholic friends shit like "what saint did you pick for Confirmation" and get answers back ranging from "uh, I didn't bother getting Confirmed: gross" all the way up to "oh yeah I had two saints: Joan of Arc, and of course John Chrysotom."

Most of my friends aren't currently practicing, of course, and I'm certainly not, but at the same time, it's--comfortingly familiar, let us say. It's a comfortable discomfort.

And there's the vicious glee from knowing that teenage me totally picked one of the queer saints purely by accident. That's pretty good, too.
sciatrix: A thumbnail from an Escher print, black and white, of a dragon with its tail in its mouth, wing outstretched behind. (Default)
...because apparently preparing for all those conventions really takes it out of me. (I designed two different posters on different subsets of mine and a coworker's research and presented them both in a space of about six weeks.)

I keep forgetting how rough transitions between summer and the regular academic year always are for me. I'm still ridiculously freaked out about the possibility that I won't finish, but I also know for a fact that my PI gives enough of a shit about my progress to ask people on his facebook how you help out a student who is dealing with confidence issues, and I'm moving fine on my new project which is more interesting than my old one anyway.

Anyway.

I also fell facefirst into Daredevil fandom, of all the stupid damn things--or hell, maybe not, because fucked-up Irish-American Catholicism + actually attempting to interrogate disability (not that the show bothers, but fuck it) + digging into attempts at realistic representation of relying on non-sight sensory modalities without, god help me, resorting to fucking echolocation really kind of is my jam.

(Does Matt Murdock rely on echolocation to "see" things? Well, he ain't wandering around squeaking at high pitches at intervals, and he doesn't seem to be tapping his damn cane either to get high frequency noises smeared across that atonal click, so I'm going to say that he probably doesn't use that as much as he's using a mixture of wind currents, extremely acute spatial sense and calculations, and smell to localize things.

I gotta rant at some point about how my observations of Dent inform my perception of points where Murdock's lack of sight is actually going to cause him some issues, because to be honest the show appears to have given him sensory modalities that are actually more powerful than my cat's. Dent gets around just fine, but vision actually isn't interchangeable with echolocation and dammit, different modalities are useful for different things; that's why species with different ecologies rely on different signaling to different extents, and existing human adaptive tech can compensate for some of those difficulties but not all of them.

Might send that to the relevant comm first, though.)

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