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When we watch a mime seemingly pull rope, climb steps or try to escape that infernal box, we don't struggle to recognize the implied objects our minds automatically "see" them, a new study concludes.
Mimes get us to see things that aren t there futurity.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from futurity.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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When we watch a mime seemingly pull rope, climb steps or try to escape that infernal box, we don t struggle to recognize the implied objects our minds automatically see them, a new study concludes.
To explore how the mind processes the objects mimes seem to interact with, Johns Hopkins University cognitive scientists brought the art of miming into the lab, concluding that invisible, implied surfaces are represented rapidly and automatically. The work appears today in the journal
Psychological Science. Most of the time, we know which objects are around us because we can just see them directly. But what we explored here was how the mind automatically builds representations of objects that we can t see at all but that we know must be there because of how they are affecting the world, said senior author Chaz Firestone, an assistant professor who directs the university s Perception & Mind Laboratory. That s basically what mimes do. They can make us feel like we re awa