sevbucmash
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2022
- Messages
- 964
- Reaction score
- 470
- Age
- 42
Some faces feel wrong, not monstrous, not alien, but just close enough to human to be terrifying. You know the moment when you see it, something is off. Before your brain can even explain it, your body already knows. This isn't right. Throughout human evolution there was several different species of humans, and to survive our brains developed a response, we feel uncanny or earie when someone resembles a human being, but not quite. This psychological response was discovered independently in cinematography and robotics. It's an instinct.
A number of theories have been proposed to explain the cognitive mechanism causing the phenomenon, in our context the most important is this one:
Mate selection: Automatic, stimulus-driven appraisals of uncanny stimuli elicit aversion by activating an evolved cognitive mechanism for the avoidance of selecting mates with low fertility, poor hormonal health, or ineffective immune systems based on visible features of the face and body that are predictive of those traits.
In other words. In modern society, if you dress different, if you smell different, if you move different, if you act different to socially acceptable norms or otherwise is socially untuned, then you are triggering instincts in other people which makes them perceive you negatively. Females, and males, feel uncanny or earie around you, describing you as a crip.
Can you think of situations in which you have triggered the uncanny valley instinct in others?
A number of theories have been proposed to explain the cognitive mechanism causing the phenomenon, in our context the most important is this one:
Mate selection: Automatic, stimulus-driven appraisals of uncanny stimuli elicit aversion by activating an evolved cognitive mechanism for the avoidance of selecting mates with low fertility, poor hormonal health, or ineffective immune systems based on visible features of the face and body that are predictive of those traits.
In other words. In modern society, if you dress different, if you smell different, if you move different, if you act different to socially acceptable norms or otherwise is socially untuned, then you are triggering instincts in other people which makes them perceive you negatively. Females, and males, feel uncanny or earie around you, describing you as a crip.
Can you think of situations in which you have triggered the uncanny valley instinct in others?
