Pattern recognition enhancement: Difference between revisions
>David Hedlund ===External links=== * [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pareidolia Pareidolia (Wikipedia)] |
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[[File:Faceincloud.jpg|thumbnail|300px|'''Face in a cloud''' by '''[http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2012-10/14/pareidolic-robot Neil Usher]''' - This image serves as an example of [[pattern recognition enhancement]].]] | [[File:Faceincloud.jpg|thumbnail|300px|'''Face in a cloud''' by '''[http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2012-10/14/pareidolic-robot Neil Usher]''' - This image serves as an example of [[pattern recognition enhancement]].]] | ||
'''Pattern recognition enhancement''' can be described as an increase in a person's ability to recognise | '''Pattern recognition enhancement''' can be described as an increase in a person's ability to recognise patterns (usually faces) within vague stimuli. | ||
This innate ability which human beings possess in everyday life is referred to by the scientific literature as pareidolia and is a | This innate ability which human beings possess in everyday life is referred to by the scientific literature as pareidolia and is a well documented phenomenon.<ref>Seeing Jesus in toast: Neural and behavioral correlates of face pareidolia | http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0010945214000288</ref><ref>Pareidolia in Infants | http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0118539</ref><ref>Why People See Faces When There Are None: Pareidolia (psychology today) | https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/how-think-neandertal/201608/why-people-see-faces-when-there-are-none-pareidolia</ref> Common examples of this include spotting faces in everyday objects, such as the front of a car, or seeing different objects in clouds. | ||
Under this effect, pareidolia can become significantly more pronounced than it would usually be during everyday sober living. For example, scenery may look remarkably like detailed images, everyday objects may look like faces, and clouds may appear as fantastical objects, all without any visual alterations actually taking place. Once an image has been perceived within an object or landscape, the mind may further exaggerate this recognition through the [[hallucinatory state|hallucinatory effect]] known as [[transformations]], which goes beyond pareidolia and becomes a standard visual hallucination. | |||
====Image examples==== | ====Image examples==== |