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Our brains prefer invented visual information to the real thing

By Clare Wilson

19 May 2017

a close-up of a man's eyes

Our brains make up for the bits our individual eyes can’t see

Tyler Finck/sursly/Getty

Seeing shouldn鈥檛 always be believing. We all have blind spots in our vision, but we don鈥檛 notice them because our brains fill the gaps with made-up information. Now subtle tests show that we trust this 鈥渇ake vision鈥 more than the real thing.

If the brain works like this in other ways, it suggests we should be less trusting of the evidence from our senses, says of Cardiff University, who wasn鈥檛 involved in the study. 鈥淧erception is not providing us with a [true] representation of the world,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t is contaminated by what we already know.鈥

The blind spot is caused by a patch at the back of each eye where there are no light-sensitive cells, just a gap where neurons exit the eye on their way to the brain.

We normally don鈥檛 notice blind spots because our two eyes can fill in for each other. When vision is obscured in one eye, the brain makes up what鈥檚 in the missing area by assuming that whatever is in the regions around the spot continues inwards.

Trick of the mind

But do we subconsciously know that this filled-in vision is less trustworthy than real visual information? of the University of Osnabr眉ck in Germany and his colleagues set out to answer this question by asking 100 people to look at a picture of a circle of vertical stripes, which contained a small patch of horizontal stripes.

The circle was positioned so that with one eye obscured, the patch of horizontal stripes fell within the other eye鈥檚 blind spot. As a result, the circle appeared as though there was no patch and the vertical stripes were continuous.

The striped stimuli used in the study of how our brain treats blind spots

The striped stimuli used in the study of how our brain treats blind spots

Benedikt V Ehinger et al

Next to this was another circle of vertical stripes without a patch of horizontal stripes. People were asked to choose which circle seemed most likely to have continuous stripes.

Ehinger鈥檚 team were expecting that people would choose the circle without a patch more often. 鈥淚t would be more logical to choose the one where they can really see all the information,鈥 he says.

Cognitive bias

In fact, people chose the circle that had a filled-in patch 65 per cent of the time. 鈥淲e never expected this,鈥 says Ehinger. 鈥淭he brain trusts its own generated information more than what it sees outside in the world.鈥

This fits in with what we know about cognitive biases, says Ehinger. When people hold strong beliefs, they are likely to ignore any evidence to the contrary.

There is no obvious benefit to our brains ignoring external information, says Ehinger. 鈥淚鈥檝e talked to many people about it, and they all say it doesn鈥檛 make sense,鈥 he says.

As well as blind spots in vision, there are other ways in which our perceptions are changed by the brain鈥檚 expectations, says Teufel. For instance, if a well-known song is converted to MIDI format, which strips out the vocals, people can usually 鈥hear鈥 words that aren鈥檛 really there.

eLife

Read more: Mind maths: Your personal prediction machine; Tactile illusions; Music special: Five great auditory illusions; Body illusions: Five tricks to fool the mind; The grand delusion: Blind to bias

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