Pareidolia

From The Book of THoTH (Leaves of Wisdom)

[edit]
Hidden messages
Subliminal messages
Audio
Backmasking
Pareidolia
Psychorama
Reverse speech
Numerical
Theomatics
Visual
Fnord
Ambigram
Pareidolia
See also:
Apophenia
Cryptography
Exposure effect
Observer-expectancy effect
Pattern recognition

Pareidolia (pronounced /pɛɹaɪˈdoliə/ or /pæraɪˈdəʊliə/), first used in 1994 by Steven Goldstein, [1] describes a psychological phenomenon involving a vague and random stimulus (often an image or sound) being mistakenly perceived as recognizable. Common examples include images of animals or faces in clouds, seeing the man in the moon, and hearing messages on records played in reverse. The word from Greek para- amiss, faulty, wrong + eidolon, diminutive of eidos appearance, form.

This alarm clock appears to have a sad face.
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This alarm clock appears to have a sad face.

Human beings are apparently "hard-wired" to identify the human face. One possible explanation for this is that unresponsive infants tended to be ignored or abandoned, as Carl Sagan speculated in The Demon-Haunted World.

Skeptics assert that sightings of religious or iconic figures in everyday objects, such as Marian apparitions, are examples of pareidolia, as are electronic voice phenomena. The Face on Mars is a phenomenon that succeeded the Martian canals, both eventually attributed to pareidolia, when the "seen" images disappeared in better and more numerous images. Many Canadians thought they saw the face of the Devil in the Queen's hair on a dollar bill in the 1954 series, adapted from a photograph (illustration, right). The bills were not withdrawn from circulation, but the image was altered in its next printing.

The "devil's head" illusion on the 1954 Canadian dollar
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The "devil's head" illusion on the 1954 Canadian dollar

A similar phenomenon is the clustering illusion.

The Rorschach inkblot test uses pareidolia attempting to gain insight into a person's mental state. While this test is still widely employed, its scientific basis is disputed, and no studies have shown empirical confirmation of success.

See also

  • The 23 enigma
  • Face on Mars
  • Man in the Moon
  • Old Man of the Mountain
  • Paranoiac-critical method
  • Religious pareidolia
  • Simulacrum

External links