Greta Stuart, Blake W Saurels, Amanda K Robinson, Jessica Taubert
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Experiment 2 demonstrated that illusory facial structures within food items did not interfere with the recognition of the object's veridical identity, affirming that examples of face pareidolia maintain their objecthood. Experiment 3 directly compared behavioral responses to illusory faces under different task conditions. The data indicate that, with extended viewing time, the object identity dominates perception. From a behavioral perspective, the findings revealed that illusory faces have two distinct identities as both faces and objects that may be processed in parallel. Future research could explore the neural representation of these unique stimuli under varying circumstances and attentional demands, providing deeper insights into the encoding of visual stimuli for detection and recognition. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).</p>","PeriodicalId":50195,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Experimental Psychology-Human Perception and Performance","volume":" ","pages":"710-720"},"PeriodicalIF":2.1000,"publicationDate":"2025-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"One object with two identities: The rapid detection of face pareidolia in face and food detection tasks.\",\"authors\":\"Greta Stuart, Blake W Saurels, Amanda K Robinson, Jessica Taubert\",\"doi\":\"10.1037/xhp0001296\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Humans are so sensitive to faces and face-like patterns in the environment that sometimes we mistakenly see a face where none exists-a common illusion called \\\"face pareidolia.\\\" Examples of face pareidolia, \\\"illusory faces,\\\" occur in everyday objects such as trees and food and contain two identities: an illusory face and an object. In this study, we studied illusory faces in a rapid serial visual presentation paradigm over three experiments to explore the detectability of illusory faces under various task conditions and presentation speeds. The first experiment revealed the rapid and reliable detection of illusory faces even with only a glimpse, suggesting that face pareidolia arises from an error in rapidly detecting faces. Experiment 2 demonstrated that illusory facial structures within food items did not interfere with the recognition of the object's veridical identity, affirming that examples of face pareidolia maintain their objecthood. Experiment 3 directly compared behavioral responses to illusory faces under different task conditions. The data indicate that, with extended viewing time, the object identity dominates perception. From a behavioral perspective, the findings revealed that illusory faces have two distinct identities as both faces and objects that may be processed in parallel. Future research could explore the neural representation of these unique stimuli under varying circumstances and attentional demands, providing deeper insights into the encoding of visual stimuli for detection and recognition. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
人类对环境中的面孔和类似面孔的图案非常敏感,有时我们会错误地看到一张根本不存在的脸——这是一种常见的错觉,被称为“面孔空想性视错觉”。面孔幻想性视错觉的例子,即“虚幻的面孔”,出现在树木和食物等日常物品中,包含两种身份:虚幻的面孔和物体。在本研究中,我们通过三个实验研究了在快速连续视觉呈现范式下的虚幻面孔,以探索不同任务条件和呈现速度下虚幻面孔的可检测性。第一个实验显示,即使只瞥一眼,也能快速可靠地识别出虚幻的面孔,这表明,面孔空想性视错觉是由快速识别面孔的错误引起的。实验2表明,食物中虚幻的面部结构不会干扰对物体真实身份的识别,这证实了面部幻想性视错觉的例子保持了它们的客体性。实验3直接比较了不同任务条件下对虚幻面孔的行为反应。数据表明,随着观看时间的延长,物体身份主导感知。从行为的角度来看,研究结果表明,虚幻的面孔具有两种截然不同的身份,即面孔和物体,这两种身份可能同时被处理。未来的研究可以探索这些独特刺激在不同环境和注意需求下的神经表征,为检测和识别视觉刺激的编码提供更深入的见解。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
One object with two identities: The rapid detection of face pareidolia in face and food detection tasks.
Humans are so sensitive to faces and face-like patterns in the environment that sometimes we mistakenly see a face where none exists-a common illusion called "face pareidolia." Examples of face pareidolia, "illusory faces," occur in everyday objects such as trees and food and contain two identities: an illusory face and an object. In this study, we studied illusory faces in a rapid serial visual presentation paradigm over three experiments to explore the detectability of illusory faces under various task conditions and presentation speeds. The first experiment revealed the rapid and reliable detection of illusory faces even with only a glimpse, suggesting that face pareidolia arises from an error in rapidly detecting faces. Experiment 2 demonstrated that illusory facial structures within food items did not interfere with the recognition of the object's veridical identity, affirming that examples of face pareidolia maintain their objecthood. Experiment 3 directly compared behavioral responses to illusory faces under different task conditions. The data indicate that, with extended viewing time, the object identity dominates perception. From a behavioral perspective, the findings revealed that illusory faces have two distinct identities as both faces and objects that may be processed in parallel. Future research could explore the neural representation of these unique stimuli under varying circumstances and attentional demands, providing deeper insights into the encoding of visual stimuli for detection and recognition. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance publishes studies on perception, control of action, perceptual aspects of language processing, and related cognitive processes.