Section on Neurocircuitry, Laboratory of Brain and Cognition, The National Institute of Mental Health, BG 10 RM 4C104, 10 Center Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Department of Cognitive Science and ARC Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders, Macquarie University, 16 University Avenue, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia.
Curr Biol. 2017 Aug 21;27(16):2505-2509.e2. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.06.075. Epub 2017 Aug 10.
Face perception in humans and nonhuman primates is rapid and accurate [1-4]. In the human brain, a network of visual-processing regions is specialized for faces [5-7]. Although face processing is a priority of the primate visual system, face detection is not infallible. Face pareidolia is the compelling illusion of perceiving facial features on inanimate objects, such as the illusory face on the surface of the moon. Although face pareidolia is commonly experienced by humans, its presence in other species is unknown. Here we provide evidence for face pareidolia in a species known to possess a complex face-processing system [8-10]: the rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta). In a visual preference task [11, 12], monkeys looked longer at photographs of objects that elicited face pareidolia in human observers than at photographs of similar objects that did not elicit illusory faces. Examination of eye movements revealed that monkeys fixated the illusory internal facial features in a pattern consistent with how they view photographs of faces [13]. Although the specialized response to faces observed in humans [1, 3, 5-7, 14] is often argued to be continuous across primates [4, 15], it was previously unclear whether face pareidolia arose from a uniquely human capacity. For example, pareidolia could be a product of the human aptitude for perceptual abstraction or result from frequent exposure to cartoons and illustrations that anthropomorphize inanimate objects. Instead, our results indicate that the perception of illusory facial features on inanimate objects is driven by a broadly tuned face-detection mechanism that we share with other species.
人类和非人类灵长类动物的面孔感知是迅速而准确的[1-4]。在人类大脑中,有一组专门用于处理面孔的视觉区域[5-7]。尽管面孔处理是灵长类动物视觉系统的首要任务,但面孔检测并非万无一失。面孔错觉是一种强烈的错觉,即在无生命物体上感知到面部特征,例如在月球表面上的幻象面孔。尽管人类经常经历面孔错觉,但其他物种是否存在这种现象尚不清楚。在这里,我们提供了一种证据,证明在一种已知具有复杂面孔处理系统的物种中存在面孔错觉[8-10]:猕猴(Macaca mulatta)。在一项视觉偏好任务中[11,12],猴子注视着那些在人类观察者中引起面孔错觉的物体的照片的时间比注视那些没有引起幻象面孔的相似物体的照片的时间更长。对眼动的检查表明,猴子注视着幻象内部面部特征的方式与它们观看面孔照片的方式一致[13]。尽管在人类中观察到的对面孔的特殊反应[1,3,5-7,14]通常被认为在灵长类动物中是连续的[4,15],但以前不清楚面孔错觉是否来自人类特有的能力。例如,错觉可能是人类感知抽象的能力的产物,也可能是由于经常接触拟人化无生命物体的卡通和插图所致。相反,我们的结果表明,对无生命物体上幻象面部特征的感知是由一种广泛调谐的面孔检测机制驱动的,我们与其他物种共享这种机制。