Litcius/Paper detail

Illusory faces are more likely to be perceived as male than female

Susan G. Wardle, Sanika Paranjape, Jessica Taubert, Chris I. Baker

2022Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences66 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Significance Face pareidolia is the phenomenon of perceiving illusory faces in inanimate objects. Here we show that illusory faces engage social perception beyond the detection of a face: they have a perceived age, gender, and emotional expression. Additionally, we report a striking bias in gender perception, with many more illusory faces perceived as male than female. As illusory faces do not have a biological sex, this bias is significant in revealing an asymmetry in our face evaluation system given minimal information. Our result demonstrates that the visual features that are sufficient for face detection are not generally sufficient for the perception of female. Instead, the perception of a nonhuman face as female requires additional features beyond that required for face detection.

Topics & Concepts

PerceptionPsychologyFace perceptionFace (sociological concept)Cognitive psychologyCognitive biasSocial perceptionFacial expressionFluencySocial psychologyVisual perceptionPhenomenonCognitionDevelopmental psychologyCommunicationPhysicsSociologyQuantum mechanicsNeuroscienceMathematics educationSocial scienceFace Recognition and PerceptionEvolutionary Psychology and Human BehaviorAesthetic Perception and Analysis