BEIJING, Jan. 24 (Xinhuanet) -- You've been married
for 10 years but when it comes to spotting your wife or husband in a crowd -- no
way. That's because new research indicates your brain processes a jumbled
mass of faces as a collection of blurred lines and edges.
The phenomenon is called crowding and it takes place
when a person fails to recognize an individual object in a cluttered
environment. The seeming malfunction could 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.
While scientists have documented crowding for simple
objects, many had assumed this breakdown in recognition would not hold for human
faces.
"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," said David Whitney, a
psychologist at the Center for Mind and Brain at the University of California,
Davis.
Whitney and his colleagues conducted five experiments
to measure participants' recognition of a familiar face or house located in a
crowded display of other faces or houses. Images would flash onto a computer
screen and subjects had to indicate whether the target face, for instance, was
on the right, on the left or not present at all.
The participants had the most trouble identifying
target faces surrounded by upright faces, as would be seen in crowds. When
viewing images of houses or upside-down faces, participants had no difficulty
recognizing the target object.
Translating the computer-screen observations to real
life, the researchers suggest that images of upright faces interfere with each
other, partially explaining why it's so tricky to pick out a face in a
crowd.
The results, detailed in a recent issue of the
Journal of Vision, may have implications for individuals with face-recognition
disorders and ailments related to visual attention, the researchers suggest. In
the long-term, the results could help scientists develop an artificial visual
system that rivals that of humans.
(Agencies)