Even If You Know About The Gorilla, You Might Not Catch The Unexpected
from the did-you-see-it? dept
There’s a very famous perception experiment, which many of you have probably seen. If you haven’t, you should watch it here before reading on:
“A lot of people seem to take the message of our original gorilla study to be that people don’t pay enough attention to what is happening around them, and that by paying more attention and ‘expecting the unexpected,’ we will be able to notice anything important,” he added. “The new experiment shows that even when people know that they are doing a task in which an unexpected thing might happen, that doesn’t suddenly help them notice other unexpected things.”
The guys behind the videos have done some other unique experiments as well, which you can find on their website. The other one I really like is this experiment involving a guy asking a pedestrian for directions, where the guy asking for directions is secretly “switched” with someone else in the middle, and 50% of people don’t even notice:
Filed Under: attention, perception, unexpected
Comments on “Even If You Know About The Gorilla, You Might Not Catch The Unexpected”
I got the first and third videos. On the second one I noticed the background change color, but I didn’t notice the one person leave the area.
Re: Re:
Same here, I noticed she had walked off, but didn’t realize she hadn’t come back, I thought she had come back around the other side of the gorilla somehow.
Re: Re:
On the second one I noticed the black shirted player leave, but I didn’t notice the curtain changing color at all.
Does this test really say a lot?
Maybe the existing thought process we use is the best way for the majority of us to process information,..after all, if we acted like a computer, we really would need one, would we?
I think Dateline did both of these experiments last week as well, for those who want another look at it. Very interesting stuff indeed.
I almost got it.
This is the first time I’ve seen this. Got the gorilla in the first one. Noticed the black player left in the second one, but didn’t catch the color change.
Did get the right count both times though. 🙂
Very interesting. I’m wondering though if somebody was to watch the video more than once, without the explanation, if they would be more likely to catch the unexpected, or if they would continue to miss it.
Re: I almost got it.
Spotted the gorilla, but probably only cause I was primed by the title – missed the curtain change and person leaving completely 😀
I think you’d spot it the second time through even without an explanation, you wouldn’t be concentrating on counting the passes then.
Re: Re: I almost got it.
“I think you’d spot it the second time through even without an explanation, you wouldn’t be concentrating on counting the passes then.”
Ah, but what if the second time they told you to count the black player passes?
…Wow, I got both.
Well, I caught the curtain colour at the very end (and really only noticed because of how fake the red background looked). But I still noticed the missing player as soon as she walked off.
This is the blindness affecting the entertainment industry and the U.S. government that are so focused on punishment they forgot they can do things differently.
Re: Re:
You know, I know this site has a lot to do with how badly the recording companies are hurting the music industry, but not every article has anything to do with it . These are cool experiments.
Get over yourself.
Door study
For the people that noticed the changes, were they “tipped off” by sound (different voice) or appearance?
Quick: What the color was the second guy wearing? Is it the same as the first guy?
Where's the controversy?
I’m so used to reading about ridiculous lawsuits on Techdirt, I expected the article to end with the researcher being sued by someone.
Re: Where's the controversy?
And I’m so used to Techdirt commenters ridiculing every one of Mike’s posts like it was a sport that I was surprised to find positive and engaged readers.
To your point, however, I’m sure there’s someone out there who can figure out how to abuse the system to suppress this research. Perhaps a bogus DMCA takedown or other claims of IP infringement?
The Pussy switch
Perspective has been a media favorite and magic’s friend forever. Perfect example is the uproar about the Sharrod video. The truth is the media, WH and NAACP all screwed up and are now trying to play off their screw up by
us with the racism hand, when the other hand is holding their combine incompetence for not verifying the facts before roasting Shirley alive.
I too didn’t see the Gorilla the first time I saw this video a few years ago and didn’t notice the curtain change this time. Yahoo had some puzzles posted on the main page and one that is truly enlightening to our malleable perspective is the “Rotating Pussy”. I found this illusion before reading the story and have been working the Pussy for sometime now with great enjoyment. The trick is to use your peripheral vision.
Optical Illusion “Rotating Pussy”
Re: The Pussy switch
Yahoo had some puzzles posted on the main page and one that is truly enlightening to our malleable perspective is the “Rotating Pussy”.
Take a look at Techdirt’s default silhouette avatar (for example, see Mr. Block, above). Is the figure facing towards you or away from from you? With some practice, you may be able to perceive it either way.
Distractions
People have limits as to how many things they can really pay attention to at once. If you’re distracted by following the balls, you might miss the gorilla. The same thing happens to people talking on cell phones while driving.
Re: Distractions
Exactly, I had the same thought.
This reminds me of a dialogue from the Discworld game, I don’t remember very well how it went but it was something like this:
Wizard: My advice to you is that you should always expect the unexpected.
Rincewind: But how can it be unexpected if I am always expecting it?
Wizard: Good point. Then my advice to you is to always expect the expected.
Bad experiment.
We’re talking about language (or only semantics) as much as perception when we say: “an unexpected event”.
An event, or occurence, is not the gradual change of a colour (which was painfully obvious I might add), this is as much an event as are the patterns of shadow changing on the ground because of moving clouds. No we don’t generally describe this as an event.
The person leaving could be seen as an event (didn’t see it the first time), but it has no influence over the proceedings.
A gorilla stepping into the group is something of a completely different magnitude.
“Notice changes” would be a better description for what happens instead of “notice unexpected events”, which is misleading.
The guy asking for directions switcharoo has been done by about every candid camera show ever. So that’s hardly worth a mention… in fact, most of invisible gorilla’s work I find very uninspired.
By comparison, the little whodunnit video (at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubNF9QNEQLA) is an amazing example of what human perception can miss.
An audio analogy
You’re in a room full of 50 dozen people, you’re asked to hold a conversation with the person in front of you. Then, after you leave, you’re asked to retell about the conversation the person half-way across the room was having.
Since you could technically “hear” them, then why couldn’t you remember what they were talking about?
These “awareness” tests are a bunch of bull. They simply show how we humans process information selectively so as to not become overwhelmed by it. The room full of people having conversations is no different that looking at the team passing the ball and then the gorilla shows up. Sight is no different than sound in this respect when it comes to information.
There is no way you can become more “aware” so that you’d perceive every minute change around you. And even if you could somehow be altered to be that “aware” you’d be unable to function normally due to all the sensory overload you’d be trying to cope with.
These guys are showing a well done experiment but draw stupid conjectures from them.
ADHD
See, this is how you know you have ADD 🙂 The first thing that happened when the gorilla entered the screen. I stopped counting and looked at the ape. That… clearly has some evolutionary advantage. But not so much in this day and age 🙁
Not quite getting it
I don’t think many people paid attention to the title of the test. It’s a selective attention experiment.
You are directed to focus your attention on a task and that is what causes you to miss obvious changes in the scene. If the instructions were changed then you could expect that more people would notice the “unexpected”.
How this applies to patents
This is interesting stuff. I think it applies to the obviousness question that frequently comes up with patents. Some missed the gorilla, some did not. But once you know about the gorilla then the gorilla is truly obvious. The same exact thing happens with patents, what is obvious today might not have been obvious yesterday.
Re: How this applies to patents
I don’t think this has anything to do with obviousness in the least.
Misdirection is a completely different thing than hindsight, and patent examiners have many more times to look over everything.
If you were show the video twice, even with the part explaining the gorilla taken out, I think pretty much everyone would catch the gorilla.
There are many, many ways this analogy fails horribly.
Heh...
I agree the article’s title ruined the first video. I was actually looking for the gorilla the whole time.
But when the second video was introduced, I knew there was something else going to come of it. Oddly enough, a tall blonde wearing black was just too damn good looking to stop looking at, and I watched as she left the game completely unrelated to the test at hand.
The third video I’ve seen before, so it wasn’t a surprise to see the outcome. The 50% was the bigger surprise. This number has grown in the 20 years since I last saw the test.
I guess in today’s world, if it’s not electronically given to people, it’s worthless to pay attention to it. Just like driving. Why care about other drivers when there are so many other gadgets one can play with while driving.
Oh well. I’m sure when I die, my casket will pop up 2 message boxes asking if it’s okay to really bury the box, come with malware protection so my bones don’t rot away faster, and my tombstone will read “To read the text for this marker, please visit the nearest app store and pay $1.99 to view it. Oh, and it’s copyright, bitches!”
Invisible Gorilla
The question is, do the people who don’t notice lack perception, or do the people who do notice lack the ability to focus? I think the latter.
Einstein was often “dinged” for perpetually not noticing things, such as, “get off the train here to go home”. I submit he did more than the people who always got off at the right station.
None of this really surprises me
What’s the point? I understand this is interesting from a scientific point of view and kind of fun to learn about, but so what. Perhaps it’s more of a surprise that 50% actually noticed the changes.
An interesting corollary is that once you have a belief you will notice evidence that supports that belief but fail to notice evidence which refutes it. I think we see that kind of thing in the comments on this site a lot.
And I notice that I do this all the time, so I’m not just talking about people I don’t agree with. It goes for the people I do agree with … and me too. Realizing this lets me be slightly more objective, I think.
In a similar vein, I love Richard Wiseman’s card trick video. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=voAntzB7EwE
I noticed that the girls in black had much nicer asses than the girls in white…
Its this seeing what you expect that leads to some motorcycle/auto and bicycle/auto accidents. They driver says ” I never saw …”. He/She did not see because they were not expecting to see it. (This is why bicyclists wear bright colors as they stand out). Its the same thing in economics, the black swans were there but not seen. Its a well known problem with our perception in a lot of areas. Recall cant see forest for trees…
Always amazed
I am always amazed at what most people will miss, very few people are situationally aware and most pay little attention to their environment. Many times way they are easy victims of crimes as well.
I noticed the color change but I thought it was a video glitch…
I did miss the player leaving tho.
The real lesson here is to know what it is you’re focusing on. Everyone is focused on something, and because of this everyone has blind spots. You need to know where your focus is so that when someone tells you there’s a gorilla in the room you’ll know how to unfocus and spot it.
Magicians
Magicians have known about this for centuries. It is called misdirection. The examples in the videos are not particularly good ones. A 50% success rate would not be adequate for a professional magician.
I didn’t actually notice that the color of the curtain changed but I noticed that one of the white players appeared to have different colored pants
I sort of cheated and did not try to count the passes. I was expecting something more subtle like maybe the players shirts colors changing.
Almost missed the gorilla, even though I knew it would happen at some point. Did catch the person leaving. Missed the curtain color change.