Actually Deepak, this is AGI related.

This week I finally found a cool body of research that I previously had no
knowledge of. This research area is in psychology, which is probably why I
missed it the first time. It has to do with human perception, object files,
how we keep track of object, individuate them, match them (the
correspondence problem), etc.

And I found the perfect article just now for you Deepak:
http://www.duke.edu/~mitroff/papers/SimonsMitroff_01.pdf

This article mentions why the brain does not notice things. And I just
realized as I was reading it why we don't see the gorilla or other
unexpected changes. The reason is this:
We have a limited amount of processing power that we can apply to visual
tracking and analysis. So, in attention demanding situations such as these,
we assign our processing resources to only track the things we are
interested in. In fact, we probably do this all the time, but it is only
when we need a lot of attention to be applied to a few objects do we notice
that we don't see some unexpected events.

So, our brain knows where to expect the ball next and our visual processing
is very busy tracking the ball and then seeing who is throwing it. As a
result, it is unable to also process the movement of other objects. If the
unexpected event is drastic enough, it will get our attention. But since
some of the people are in black, our brain probably thinks it is just a
person in black and doesn't consider it an event that is worthy of
interrupting our intense tracking.

Dave

On Sat, Jul 24, 2010 at 4:58 PM, Anastasios Tsiolakidis <sokratis.dk@
gmail.com> wrote:

> On Sat, Jul 24, 2010 at 7:07 PM, deepakjnath <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> >
> > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vJG698U2Mvo
> >
> > Can anyone suggest why our brains exhibit this phenomenon?
>
> May I flag this as AGI irrelevant? The brain at a non-AGI task is not
> that interesting for AGI, me thinks.  Plus, we have loads of
> specialist opinion on these things. Having just missed the gorilla
> myself, I would be curious to see the video´s effectiveness with
> different screen sizes and different prompts though. How about the
> prompt "which of these players is the most intelligent"!
>
>
> -------------------------------------------
> agi
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