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The concept of the El Greco Fallacy challenges the interaction between cognition and perception. Demonstrated through various studies, it raises doubts about claims where cognition impacts visual processing. For example, studies where participants holding a wide pole perceive doorways narrower or associating colors with numbers and letters, implying top-down effects on perception. While acknowledging the perceptual expertise of radiologists and birders, it raises the question of whether these are truly instances of cognition influencing perception or expertise in recognition tasks.
The discussion of top-down effects on perception delves into recognizing patterns and categorization. Views on top-down effects challenging the linear model of visual processing and the role of recognition highlighted by examples like perceptual expertise in radiologists and birders are examined. The distinction between perception, recognition, and categorization is highlighted, questioning whether these cases truly demonstrate cognition influencing perception.
Perceptual expertise, like in radiologists and birders, showcases rapid recognition and categorization abilities. While these experts excel in identifying patterns or features in scans or flight patterns, the question arises whether this rapid categorization is a cognitive influence on perception or a separate mid-layer function between pure perception and cognition.
The theoretical stance asserting minimal effects of cognition on perception, presented in 2016, remains a strong foundation. As further research explores the dynamics between cognition and perception, the landscape of evidence supporting these claims continues to evolve. The critical examination of effects challenging traditional views offers valuable insights into the intricate relationship between cognition and perception.
Showing a perfectly gray scale banana can lead individuals to perceive a subtle yellow tint, demonstrating how prior knowledge of banana color influences perception. Studies reveal that allowing subjects to control the color of the banana results in a slight blue hue, indicating a complex interaction between color perception and cognitive biases.
Research explores the perception of causality in visual stimuli, revealing that individuals can feel the transfer of force between objects in motion. Studies by vision scientists show that prolonged exposure to causal events leads to perceptual adaptations, suggesting that causality is a perceptual attribute similar to color or motion perception.
Perceptual processing exhibits unique characteristics such as speed of processing, automaticity, and sensitivity to subtle details in stimuli. The perception of high-level features like social interactions in bodies facing each other highlights the rich and nuanced nature of perceptual representations, distinct from cognitive processing.
Investigations into silence perception challenge traditional views on perception, revealing that moments of silence can evoke similar perceptual responses as sounds. Studies with human participants suggest that perceivers can treat silences with the same perceptual significance as auditory stimuli under specific conditions, emphasizing the complexities of the human perceptual system.
We've all seen those illusions. The dots seem to dance, when in fact they're completely still. The lines look like they bend, but in reality they're perfectly straight. Here's the thing: It doesn't matter that you know the ground truth of these illusions—the dancing and bending won't stop. And that we see the world one way, even though we know it's actually another way, is a fascinating quirk of our minds—and maybe a telling one. It suggests that there's a chasm between perceiving and thinking, that these may be two independent provinces of the mind. But, if so, we're faced with another question: Where does perception end and thinking begin?
My guest today is Dr. Chaz Firestone. Chaz is an Associate Professor of Psychological and Brain Sciences at Johns Hopkins University, and Director of the Perception and Mind lab there. He and his research group study perceiving, thinking, and the interface between the two.
Here, Chaz and I talk about his background in philosophy and how it continues to animate his research. We sketch the differences between perception and cognition and why the two are best considered separate faculties. We consider the idea of so-called "top-down" effects on perception. We discuss the fact that, even if perception and cognition are separate, there's much more to perception than meets the eye. We seem to see things like causes and social interactions; we perceive things like silences and absences. Along the way, Chaz and I touch on the modular view mind, skeletal shapes, the El Greco fallacy, stubborn epistemology, birders and radiologists, retinotopy and visual adaptation, adversarial images, human-machine comparisons, and the case of the blue banana.
This is a fun one, friends. But before we get to it, one humble request. If you've been enjoying Many Minds, now would be a great time to leave us a rating or review. You can do this on Apple Podcasts or on Spotify. It would really help us grow and get the word out! It actually looks like our last review on Apple Podcasts is about 10 months old—so, if you have a minute, that could really use some freshening up.
Alright folks, on to my conversation with Chaz Firestone. Enjoy!
A transcript of this episode is available here.
Notes and links
3:00 – Dr. Firestone’s early paper reporting the Times Square experiment and the “skeletal shape” phenomenon.
8:00 – A visual explanation of the “missing bullet holes” graphic.
13:00 – Dr. Firestone has collaborated intensively with the philosopher Ian Phillips.
15:00 – A recent book by Ned Block, The Border Between Seeing and Thinking.
24:00 – Visual illusions are legion, as are inventories of them. See, for instance, this catalogue on Wikipedia or this Reddit thread.
25:00 – An obituary for Jerry Fodor, who died in 2017. The classic book by Zenon Pylyshyn, Computation and Cognition.
28:00 – A paper by Dr. Firestone about the history of the El Greco fallacy. An empirical paper by Dr. Firestone and Brian Scholl showing the El Greco fallacy at work in perception research.
35:00 – A target article (with commentaries) in Behavioral and Brain Sciences by Dr. Firestone and Dr. Scholl about claims of “top-down” effects on perception. Dr. Firestone has published other work on this theme, e.g., here, here, & here.
41:00 – A paper with discussion (and illustration) of the classic Dalmation Mooney image.
45:00 – A study of rapid visual pattern recognition in expert chess players.
50:30 – A paper by J.J. Valenti and Dr. Firestone about the case of the blue banana.
54:00 – A review paper by Alon Hafri and Dr. Firestone reviewing evidence that people actually perceive high-level relations like causality, support, and social interaction.
56:00 – A study by Martin Rolfs and colleagues about the perception of causality.
1:02:00 – A study by Liuba Papeo and colleagues about the perception of social interactions. A related paper showing an inversion effect.
1:04:00 – A paper by Alon Hafri and colleagues on the perception of roles in an interaction.
1:06:00 – A widely cited paper by J. Kiley Hamlin and colleagues on the recognition of social interactions in preverbal infants.
1:06:30 – A review paper on reading in the brain.
1:10:00 – A paper by Rui Goh, Dr. Phillips, and Dr. Firestone on the perception of silence.
1:18:00 – A recent review paper by Jorge Morales and Dr. Firestone about the dialogue between philosophy of perception and psychology, which discusses the perception of absence (among other case studies).
1:22:00 – A recent perspective piece by Dr. Firestone about human-machine comparisons.
1:25:00 - An empirical paper by Zhenglong Zhou and Dr. Firestone on the deciphering of adversarial images by humans.
1:28:00 – For a review of the mirror self-recognition test, see our earlier audio essay.
1:35:00 – Other interesting work going on in Dr. Firestone’s research group has investigated representational momentum, beauty, and epistemic actions, among other topics.
Recommendations
The Modularity of Mind, by Jerry Fodor
The Contents of Visual Experience, by Susanna Siegel
Psych, by Paul Bloom
Many Minds is a project of the Diverse Intelligences Summer Institute, which is made possible by a generous grant from the Templeton World Charity Foundation to UCLA. It is hosted and produced by Kensy Cooperrider, with help from Assistant Producer Urte Laukaityte and with creative support from DISI Directors Erica Cartmill and Jacob Foster. Our artwork is by Ben Oldroyd. Our transcripts are created by Sarah Dopierala.
Subscribe to Many Minds on Apple, Stitcher, Spotify, Pocket Casts, Google Play, or wherever you listen to podcasts. You can also now subscribe to the Many Minds newsletter here!
We welcome your comments, questions, and suggestions. Feel free to email us at: manymindspodcast@gmail.com.
For updates about the show, visit our website or follow us on Twitter: @ManyMindsPod.
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