Brain Mysteries  
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Links |  Subscribe to BrainMysteries.com RSS Feed Subscribe

Face Facts: People Don't Stand Out In A Crowd (1/21/2008)

Tags:
perception, senses, vision, attention, crowding, facial recognition, focus

Visual attention, a persons ability to visual focus on and object may cause brain to become overwhelmed
Visual attention, a persons ability to visual focus on and object may cause brain to become overwhelmed
Why is it difficult to pick out even a familiar face in a crowd? We all experience this, but the phenomenon has been poorly understood until now. The results of a recent study may have implications for individuals with face-recognition disorders and visual-attention related ailments -- and eventually could help scientists develop an artificial visual system that approaches the sophistication of human visual perception.

"Crowding" is a failure to recognize an individual object in a cluttered environment. It may be due to one of the shortcuts our brains use to help us make sense of the vast amount of visual information we take in every second.

The authors conducted five experiments to measure participants' recognition of a familiar face or house that was located in a crowded display of other faces or houses. They found that face recognition is more difficult when target faces are surrounded by upright faces (as seen in crowds). This effect was not present for images of houses, or when upside-down faces were used as targets. The results indicate that searching for a face in a crowd is difficult in part because images of upright faces interfere with each other.

This kind of crowding is well documented in simple features, such as slanted lines or edges. But faces are a complex stimulus. Many researchers believe the importance of faces in our lives lend them special status in the brain: they are processed not as a collection of these lines and edges, as many objects are, but holistically, as a single image. The authors in this study were the first to show that crowding also occurs for these high-level stimuli.

"Crowding may reveal one of the fundamental mechanisms the visual system uses to consolidate or filter a great deal of information into a very few meaningful chunks," explained Dr. Whitney. "If vision scientists and engineers are to develop an efficient and realistic artificial visual system, they will almost certainly benefit from using the human visual system as a model. An understanding of the visual system's heuristics, shortcuts and limitations -- such as crowding -- will likely prove essential in designing effective artificial vision."

The study is part of the recently completed Journal of Vision special issue titled "Crowding: Including illusory conjunctions, surround suppression, and attention".

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology

Savings - Loans - Renegade Motorhomes - Secured Loans

Post Comments:

Search

Recent Articles
Subliminal learning demonstrated in the human brain 8/28/2008

Exploring the function of sleep 8/27/2008

'Perfect Pitch' in Humans Far More Prevalent than Expected 8/27/2008

Brain study could lead to new understanding of depression 8/26/2008

Cocaine: How addiction develops 8/25/2008

Blinking liars! 8/25/2008

Complex decisions? Don't sleep on it 8/24/2008

Aboriginal kids can count without numbers 8/24/2008

Killer carbs - Scientist finds the key to overeating as we age 8/23/2008

Researchers link cocoa flavanols to improved brain blood flow 8/23/2008

Young Children's 'Theory of Mind' Linked to Subsequent Metacognitive Development in Adolescence 8/22/2008

Measuring the auditory dynamics of selective attention 8/22/2008

Researchers Study Facial Structures, Brain Abnormalities to Reveal Formula for Earlier Detection of Autism 8/21/2008

Researcher Discovers Brain Serotonin System Controls Maternal Behavior 8/21/2008

New Study Shows False Memories Affect Behavior 8/20/2008

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2009 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.