
Image via iStock.
Are you one of those people who sees faces in everything – inanimate objects like powerpoints, air-conditioning units or even the clouds?
We’ve always thought nothing of it, but according to a new study, people who see these faces in everyday objects (also known as “Pareidolia”) are most likely to share a common personality trait. And, erm, it’s not exactly fabulous.
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Yep, you’re most likely to be neurotic.
In fact, our personality, sex, and emotional state may influence our likelihood to perceive faces and patterns when they don’t actually exist.
Scientists at the NNT Communication Science Laboratory in Tokyo recruited 166 students and asked them to complete two questionnaires; one to identify their personality traits and one to assess their emotional mood.
They then showed all the participants the same pattern made up of random dots, and asked them to trace and report any shapes they saw within the pattern. (Post continues after gallery.)
Can you see the faces in these inanimate objects?
The results, which were presented at the 19th annual meeting for the Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness in Paris last week, found that overall, those who scored a higher neuroticism result (77 per cent of those in the study) were found to be more likely to experience pareidolia.