This looks like the "Alien Face Illusion", except this person sees it all the time.
science
just science related topics. please contribute
note: clickbait sources/headlines aren't liked generally. I've posted crap sources and later deleted or edit to improve after complaints. whoops, sry
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I don't screen everything, lrn2scroll
Oh my god that is creepy as shit, dude. Right before bed too, gosh darn it.
Neat optical illusion!
The cynic in me is thinking, what are the chances that this patient is faking it? Seems odd that just for this one person the effect wouldn't happen on screens, while it does for everyone else with this condition.
But I can push this thought aside. This is interesting, and I've never heard of this condition before.
If you take psychedelics something similar can happen, and it's way less intense with faces on screens. Maybe it has to do with depth perception?
I can think up a few plausible explanation. The easiest of which for me is that with a static picture of a face - especially if it's not Actual Size™ - your brain might be aware that it's not an actual face. Or more accurately, the visual system is not convinced that it's a real face.
At the end of the day though, I'm no brain scientist and I've got layman's knowledge about the subject at best, so I'm happy to leave it to the professionals and trust that the scientists verified it in one way or another.
Is this clickbait science?
I think The Lancet is a reputable journal. They seem to have conveyed the findings of this article well. With quotes from the authors as well. Seems like an adequately scientific article with very little exaggeration. So, by my standards I wouldn’t consider it click bait.
The title is definitely clickbaity but the science is real as far as I can tell.
This reminds me though: I knew a woman with mental health issues who was convinced that people around her were constantly making faces at her. The article says this specific thing is very very rare, and more neurological than psychological when it happens, but still I wonder a little bit. 😕
No, it's a rare but interesting condition that could eventually have implications for adjacent psychological or physiological research.