Your memory shows you more than you actually saw
Look at a photograph. Look away. When you try to remember it, you'll confidently recall seeing more of the scene than was actually in the picture.
Your brain automatically "extends" the boundaries of what you saw, filling in what it expects to be there. It's a memory error—but it happens in less than 1/20th of a second.
You'll see 5 scenes briefly. After each one, pick which version you actually saw.
Helene Intraub and Michael Richardson discover boundary extension. Participants consistently remember seeing "wider" views of scenes.
Researchers demonstrate the effect occurs in less than 1/20th of a second—faster than a single eye movement (saccade).
Studies show boundary extension in infants (3-4 months old) and across the lifespan (ages 6-87).
Cross-cultural replication confirms the effect in South Korea and China, demonstrating universality.
The leading explanation is the Multisource Model of Scene Perception:
Parahippocampal
Place Area
Retrosplenial
Cortex
These scene-selective regions show boundary extension-related activity
Most memory errors are forgetting—you remember less than you experienced. Boundary extension is the opposite: you "remember" seeing MORE than was actually there.
This isn't a gradual distortion over time. It happens within 42 milliseconds—faster than conscious awareness. The "false memory" forms as you're still looking.
Observed in infants, children, adults, elderly, Western and East Asian cultures. It appears to be a fundamental feature of human visual cognition.
May help us build stable spatial representations. Predicting what's beyond the edge helps integrate views as we move through the world.
If people remember seeing more than was visible, eyewitness accounts may include "extended" details that weren't actually in their field of view.
Viewers remember photographs as having wider framing than they actually do. This affects how we experience cropped images and remember visual media.
Understanding boundary extension helps VR designers predict how users will perceive and remember virtual environments.