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.
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So happy to see you: our brains respond emotionally to faces we find in inanimate objects, study reveals, Australia news
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Why the brain is programmed to see faces in everyday objects
A Face Scavenger Hunt: Why We See Faces in Objects without Faces · Frontiers for Young Minds
Why Humans See Faces in Everyday Objects
Our brains “read” expressions of illusory faces in things just like real faces
How Pareidolia Can Be Used For Creative Photography
visual neuroscience News Research Articles - Page 28 of 75
Why We Are Programmed To Keep Seeing Faces In Inanimate Objects
Why the brain can see faces in everyday objects
Functional specialization (brain) - Wikipedia
Pareidolia: Why We See Faces in Almost Everything
Why the Brain Is Programmed to See Faces in Everyday Objects - Neuroscience News