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Why you can’t find your keys – even when they’re in front of you

Why you can’t find your keys – even when they’re in front of you,

Most households will be familiar with the exchange: One person insists they can’t find their keys anywhere, only for someone else to spot them immediately.

Now, an expert has explained how some things remain hidden in plain sight.

Michelle Spear, a professor of anatomy at Bristol University, revealed a phenomenon called ‘inattentional blindness’ is to blame.

She said that even when something is directly in front of us, the brain can fail to register its presence.

‘This frustrating situation reflects something real about how the brain works,’ she wrote in a blog post on The Conversation.

‘Finding objects in everyday environments relies on a process called visual search, and our brains are surprisingly imperfect at it.

‘Seeing, it turns out, is not just about what reaches the eyes. It is also about what the brain expects to find.’

When our attention is focused elsewhere – for example being stressed or in a rush – our brain filters the scene based on what it expects to see or thinks is important.

Inattentional blindness explains why it's so hard to spot your keys when they're right in front of you - especially when mixed in with clutter (file image)

Inattentional blindness explains why it’s so hard to spot your keys when they’re right in front of you – especially when mixed in with clutter (file image)

For example, if you lose your keys, your brain starts searching for a mental image of the keys in expected places or orientations.

This means that if the real keys don’t match that expectation – like being partly covered, at an unusual angle or mixed into clutter – your brain may effectively ignore them even when looking right at them.

‘If you have ever searched a kitchen counter for your keys only to have someone else pick them up instantly, you have experienced the same phenomenon,’ Professor Spear said.

‘The brain cannot analyse every object in a scene simultaneously. Instead, it relies on attention – selecting certain features while filtering out the rest.’

A fresh pair of eyes, meanwhile, are more likely to spot the ‘lost’ item because they don’t have preconceived assumptions about where it should be.

Professor Spear also explained that when men and women look for things, they tend to use their eyes in slightly different ways.

‘On average, women tend to perform slightly better at locating objects in cluttered environments, while men often perform better on tasks involving large-scale spatial navigation or mentally rotating objects in three dimensions,’ she wrote.

Some psychologists have suggested these tendencies may have deep historical roots in hunter-gatherer societies.

Previous studies have found that men and women use eye tracking differently when looking at objects

Previous studies have found that men and women use eye tracking differently when looking at objects 

Read More

Women ARE better at crosswords! Study proves women are more adept at finding and remembering words than men 

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However, it’s more likely that familiarity with an environment, experience and simple differences in attention probably matter more than gender alone, she said.

‘Ultimately, visual search is less like scanning a photograph and more like running a prediction algorithm,’ Professor Spear said.

‘The brain constantly guesses where something is likely to be and directs attention accordingly.

‘Most of the time those predictions are correct. Occasionally, they are not, and an object sitting in plain sight fails to match the brain’s expectations.

‘Which means the next time someone insists they have looked everywhere, they may well be telling the truth. They just haven’t looked in quite the right way.’

Most households will be familiar with the exchange: One person insists they can’t find their keys anywhere, only for someone else to spot them immediately.

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