Janissy wrote:
I have read that our brains are in a near-constant state of editing what our senses take in to make a seamless experience of the world.
Yeah. Our brains have to do an immense amount of processing to make sense of the images we get from our eyes. It's so difficult that we still don't really have computers that can do it - computer visual recognition tends to be either very specific, like going through a database of faces or numberplates, or it relies on simpler senses, like radar or laser ranging. There's no software that can take, say, a photograph of a room (or whatever - if you think about it, you could be shown a photo of anywhere on Earth and have a reasonable chance of working out what it was and what things were in it, and could recognise, say, a chair even if it was made in a style you'd never seen before, and so on) and identify the items in it, because to do so requires you know what things are and how they relate to each other... which takes us a long time to learn, and we never stop.
However, we don't, generally, blank things out. We aren't so stupid that (as is sometimes suggested) we "don't see things in front of our face because we don't understand them"; there are all sorts of tricks our brain pulls with our vision, like compensating for the blind spot and so on, but they're more the minor optical illusion sort of thing than "la la, I can't see that ship in the bay because I don't believe a canoe can be that big."
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