Why the Brain Is Programmed to See Faces in Everyday Objects
Face pareidolia, the phenomenon of seeing facelike structures in inanimate objects, is a perceptual phenomenon that occurs when sensory input is processed by visual mechanisms that have evolved to extract social content from human faces.
Neuroscience News provides research news for neuroscience, neurology, psychology, AI, brain science, mental health, robotics and cognitive sciences.
Neural Information Processing Project
facial recognition News Research Articles - Page 3 of 9
Why do we see faces in objects that are not actually faces? - Quora
Why Our Brains See Faces Everywhere
Neuroscience: why do we see faces in everyday objects?
Why the brain is programmed to see faces in everyday objects
brain research News Research Articles - Page 634 of 1006
Pareidolia: The science behind seeing faces in everyday objects
My life with face blindness - The Washington Post
visual illusions News Research Articles
Why your brain is hard-wired to see faces - People News
Why Humans See Faces in Everyday Objects
visual illusions News Research Articles
Brain activity is too complicated for humans to decipher. Machines can decode it for us. - Vox
Our brains “read” expressions of illusory faces in things just like real faces