Authors
Susan G Wardle, Sanika Paranjape, Jessica Taubert, Chris I Baker
Publication date
2022/2/1
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
119
Issue
5
Pages
e2117413119
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Despite our fluency in reading human faces, sometimes we mistakenly perceive illusory faces in objects, a phenomenon known as face pareidolia. Although illusory faces share some neural mechanisms with real faces, it is unknown to what degree pareidolia engages higher-level social perception beyond the detection of a face. In a series of large-scale behavioral experiments (ntotal = 3,815 adults), we found that illusory faces in inanimate objects are readily perceived to have a specific emotional expression, age, and gender. Most strikingly, we observed a strong bias to perceive illusory faces as male rather than female. This male bias could not be explained by preexisting semantic or visual gender associations with the objects, or by visual features in the images. Rather, this robust bias in the perception of gender for illusory faces reveals a cognitive bias arising from a broadly tuned face evaluation system in …
Total citations
20222023202492211
Scholar articles
SG Wardle, S Paranjape, J Taubert, CI Baker - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2022