The Invisible Gorilla Experiment
Press Start to begin the counting task
Failing to perceive unexpected objects when attention is engaged elsewhere. The classic gorilla experiment demonstrates this—focused counting blocks awareness of obvious intruders.
Inability to detect changes in visual scenes, especially during brief interruptions. People miss major changes like actors being replaced between cuts in films.
A brief period (~200-500ms) after perceiving one target during which a second target is often missed. The brain needs time to "reset" after processing.
Difficulty perceiving repeated items in rapid sequences. If shown "THE CAT IN THE HAT" quickly, many miss the second "THE".
Inattentional blindness reveals that perception isn't passive recording—it's active construction requiring attention as a critical ingredient.
Directs attention to task-relevant stimuli
Processes all visual input, but filtering occurs
Gates which information reaches awareness
Monitors for fast-moving threats
Distracted drivers miss pedestrians and cyclists
Radiologists can miss tumors while searching
Controllers may miss aircraft during high workload
Witnesses miss details outside their focus
Magicians exploit attention misdirection
"Texting while walking" blindness studies
Recent research from Johns Hopkins challenges our understanding of consciousness itself. If 70% of people who "miss" an unexpected object can still correctly identify its location better than chance, what does this mean for the boundary between conscious and unconscious perception?
This suggests a continuum of awareness rather than a binary on/off switch— we may "see" far more than we consciously realize, with attention determining what crosses the threshold into reportable experience.