Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Change Blindness

A really interesting effect:

What's the Difference between Looking and Seeing?

A large fraction of traffic accidents are of the type "driver looked but failed to see". Here, drivers collide with pedestrians in plain view, with cars directly in front of them (the classic "rear-ender"), and even run into trains. (That's right -- run into trains, not the other way around.) In such cases, information from the world is entering the driver's eyes. But at some point along the way this information is lost, causing the driver to lose connection with reality. They are looking but they are not seeing. What's going on? Our findings indicate that the critical factor is attention: To see an object change, it is necessary to attend to it. To show this, we developed a flicker paradigm in which an original and a modified image continually alternate, one after the other, with a brief blank field between the two (see Figure 1 below). The onset of each blank field swamps the local motion signals caused by a change, short-circuiting the automatic system that normally draws attention to its location. Without automatic control, attention is controlled entirely by slower, higher-level mechanisms which search the scene, object by object, until attention lands upon the object that is changing. The change blindness induced under these conditions is a form of invisibility: it can become very difficult to see a change that is obvious once attended.

To see this effect for yourself, try out the following:

Examples that can be viewed or downloaded (as QuickTime movies)

Can you spot the differences? All the changes are quite big, but I had quite a hard time with some of them. Change blindness @ wiki

4 comments:

pimp-a-lot bear said...

I find it very hard spotting the differences!

cybrbeast said...

Did you get them?

Airplane = Turbine
Chopper & Truck = Chopper Shadow
Dinner = Fence in background
Farm = Leaves top left
Harborside = Blue box left on boat
Market = Pants guy left change color
Money = Shadow center portrait
Sailboats = Water in the Horizon
Street Corner = Reflection right car window
Tourists = Palm bush behind statue

They are so obvious once you've spotted them. I cheated in some of them by quickly moving the time slider from left to right :)

pimp-a-lot bear said...

I cheated too.
almost all of them.

annom said...

yes, those are amazing effects.