When Your Brain Refuses to See Reality
You're looking at a concave (hollow) mask—yet your brain perceives it as convex (protruding)!
Drag to rotate the view and discover the truth. Toggle "Show True Depth" to see reality.
Your brain has a lifetime of experience with convex faces—every person you've ever met, every mirror you've looked in. This powerful "prior knowledge" overrides the actual depth information from your eyes. Your visual system literally refuses to see a hollow face!
The Hollow-Face Illusion (also called the Hollow-Mask Illusion) is one of the most striking demonstrations of top-down processing in perception. When viewing the inside (concave side) of a mask, observers perceive it as a normal, protruding (convex) face—even when they know it's hollow!
The illusion is so powerful that it persists despite:
Your eyes send accurate depth information to your brain—yet your brain rejects it! This isn't a failure of vision; it's a feature. Your brain prioritizes what it "knows" about faces over raw sensory data, because in natural settings, concave faces simply don't exist.
As Richard Gregory observed: "The strong visual bias of favouring seeing a hollow mask as a normal convex face is evidence for the power of top-down knowledge for vision."
The hollow-face illusion reveals a fundamental tension in how the brain processes visual information:
Raw sensory data from your eyes: shading, stereo disparity, and motion parallax all signal "this is concave."
Prior knowledge and expectations: "I've never seen a hollow face. Faces are always convex. This must be convex!"
In the hollow-face illusion, top-down processing wins. Your brain's expectations override the actual sensory information because the "face = convex" prior is so overwhelmingly strong.
Research has revealed several factors that influence the strength of the illusion:
Research at the Goodale Lab (Western University) revealed something extraordinary: while our perception sees a convex face, our motor system can still act correctly on the hollow shape!
When participants were asked to quickly flick their fingers toward targets on the mask's surface, they accurately pointed to the true positions—even while reporting that the face looked protruding. This suggests the illusion arises in the ventral stream (the "what" pathway), while the dorsal stream (the "how" pathway) uses veridical depth information.
Richard Gregory begins systematic studies of the hollow-face illusion as part of his research on perception and cognition.
The illusion becomes a standard demonstration in psychology courses, used to illustrate top-down processing.
Studies show that patients with schizophrenia are less susceptible to the illusion, suggesting altered predictive processing.
Research confirms perception-action dissociation: the motor system can ignore the illusion even when perception cannot.
The hollow-face illusion is more than a party trick—it reveals deep truths about perception: