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RazzZzatam t1_j8g6b64 wrote

To be more specific, the brain has an entire region dedicated to recognizing faces in the fusiform gyrus. When upside-down that region is not fully activated, as the orientation doesn't correspond to the brains idea of what a face is (two eyes above a nose and mouth). Because of this, the brain fills in some gaps. When inverted the face region activates and basically tells the rest of the brain something is wrong.

Fun fact on this topic: Humans aren't born with the ability to discern specifically human faces, but are born with a tendency to look at faces so as to develop this skill better. And yet in the same breath, early infants can discern between similar faces on other species (tested with pictures of a type of monkey) that even individuals who spend their lives researching the species may not be able to detect.

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ManicTypist t1_j8gi49i wrote

That's fascinating. Do you have any further reading that talks about the studies??

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RazzZzatam t1_j8gt9f7 wrote

In regards to the monkey study, I believe it was prior to ~6 months old, when habituated to the image of a monkey, babies still showed increase response as they would to a novel stimulus when shown a slightly different monkey of the same species, whereas older infants showed no increased response. Sadly, I can't provide any readings, as I'm just spouting off the things I've learned in university so far.

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ManicTypist t1_j8guk79 wrote

That's really interesting. Babies are organic processors overclocking shit until they chill tf out after they're "unboxed" (born). Biology is fascinating. Appreciate the knowledge!

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