It’s so commonplace we barely give it a second thought, but human brains seem hardwired to see human faces where there are none—in objects as varied as the moon, toys, plastic bottles, tree trunks, and vacuum cleaners. Some have even seen an imagined Jesus in cheese on toast.
Until now scientists haven’t understood exactly what the brain is doing when it processes visual signals and interprets them as representations of the human face.
Neuroscientists at the University of Sydney now say how our brains identify and analyze real human faces is conducted by the same cognitive processes that identify illusory faces.
“From an evolutionary perspective, it seems that the benefit of never missing a face far outweighs the errors where inanimate objects are seen as faces,” said Professor David Alais lead author of the study from the School of Psychology.
“There is a great benefit in detecting faces quickly,” he said, “but the system plays ‘fast and loose’ by applying a crude template of two eyes over a nose and mouth. Lots of things can satisfy that template and thus trigger a face detection response.”
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This facial recognition response happens lightning fast in the brain: within a few hundred milliseconds.
“We know these objects are not truly faces, yet the perception of a face lingers,” Professor Alais said. “We end up with something strange: a parallel experience that it is both a compelling face and an object. Two things at once. The first impression of a face does not give way to the second perception of an object.”
This error is known as “face pareidolia.” It is such a common occurrence that we accept the notion of detecting faces in objects as ‘normal’—but humans do not experience this cognitive process as strongly for other phenomena.
The brain has evolved specialized neural mechanisms to rapidly detect faces and it exploits the common facial structure as a short-cut for rapid detection.
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“Pareidolia faces are not discarded as false detections but undergo facial expression analysis in the same way as real faces,” Professor Alais said.
Not only do we imagine faces, we analyze them and give them emotional attributes.
The findings are published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
The researchers say this expression analysis of inanimate objects is because as deeply social beings, simply detecting a face isn’t enough.
“We need to read the identity of the face and discern its expression. Are they a friend or a foe? Are they happy, sad, angry, pained?” Professor Alais said.
What the study examined was whether once a pareidolia face is detected, it is subsequently analyzed for facial expression, or discarded from face processing as a false detection.
The research shows that once a false face is retained by the brain it is analyzed for its facial expression in the same way that a real face is.
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“We showed this by presenting sequences of faces and having participants rate each face’s expression on a scale ranging from angry to happy,” Professor Alais said.
What was intriguing is that a known bias in judging human faces persisted with analysis of inanimate imagined faces.
A previous study undertaken by Professor Alais showed that in a Tinder-like situation of judging face after face, a bias is observed whereby the assessment of the current face is influenced by our assessment of the previous face.
The scientists tested this by mixing up real faces with pareidolia faces—and the result was the same.
“This ‘cross-over’ condition is important as it shows the same underlying facial expression process is involved regardless of image type,” Professor Alais said.
“This means that seeing faces in clouds is more than a child’s fantasy,” he said.
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“When objects look compellingly face-like, it is more than an interpretation: they really are driving your brain’s face detection network. And that scowl, or smile; that’s your brain’s facial expression system at work. For the brain, fake or real, faces are all processed the same way.”
Not just a human trait
Scientists have found out we’re not alone in these face recognition experiences—monkey do it too.
That’s according to Jessica Taubert and her colleagues at the US National Institute of Mental Health in Maryland, who trained five rhesus macaques to stare at pairs of photos—one of an inanimate object that humans see faces in, together with a picture of a monkey’s face, or an inanimate object that does not prompt pareidolia in humans.
They measured the length of time the monkeys went about looking at each image; as it turns out, they spent far longer with the illusory faces than with the non-illusory images—and their eye gaze patterns were found to fixate on the eye and mouth areas of the illusory images too, which is just what humans do when viewing real faces.
Their research has been published in Current Biology.
(WATCH the New Scientist video for this story below.)
GIVE Your Friends a Face Full of This Fascinating Phenomenon…