condition   I   could   pull    it  off,    but I’d found   that    even    in  the middle  of  the
journey it  was possible    to  summon  oneself to  a   semblance   of  normality
for a   few moments at  a   time.
Loaded  on  my  laptop  was a   brief   video   of  a   rotating    face    mask,   used    in
a   psychological   test    called  the binocular   depth   inversion   illusion.   As  the
mask    rotates in  space,  its convex  side    turning to  reveal  its concave back,
something   remarkable  happens:    the hollow  mask    appears to  pop out to
become  convex  again.  This    is  a   trick   performed   by  the mind,   which
assumes all faces   to  be  convex, and so  automatically   corrects    for the
seeming error—unless,   as  a   neuroscientist  had told    me, one was under
the influence   of  a   psychedelic.
This    auto-correct    feature is  a   hallmark    of  our perception, which   in  the
sane,   adult   mind    is  based   as  much    on  educated    guesswork   as  the raw data
of  the senses. By  adulthood,  the mind    has gotten  very    good    at  observing
and testing reality and developing  confident   predictions about   it  that
optimize    our investments of  energy  (mental and otherwise)  and therefore
our survival.   So  rather  than    starting    from    scratch to  build   a   new
perception  from    every   batch   of  raw data    delivered   by  the senses, the mind
jumps   to  the most    sensible    conclusion  based   on  past    experience
combined    with    a   tiny    sample  of  that    data.   Our brains  are prediction
machines    optimized   by  experience, and when    it  comes   to  faces,  they    have
boatloads   of  experience: faces   are always  convex, so  this    hollow  mask
must    be  a   prediction  error   to  be  corrected.
These   so-called   Bayesian    inferences  (named  for Thomas  Bayes,  the
eighteenth-century  English philosopher who developed   the mathematics
of  probability,    on  which   these   mental  predictions are based)  serve   us  well
most    of  the time,   speeding    perception  while   saving  effort  and energy, but
they    can also    trap    us  in  literally   preconceived    images  of  reality that    are
simply  false,  as  in  the case    of  the rotating    mask.
Yet it  turns   out that    Bayesian    inference   breaks  down    in  some    people:
schizophrenics  and,    according   to  some    neuroscientists,    people  on  high
doses   of  psychedelics    drugs,  neither of  whom    “see”   in  this    predictive  or
conventionalized    manner. (Nor    do  young   children,   who have    yet to  build
the sort    of  database    necessary   for confident   predictions.)   This    raises  an
interesting question:   Is  it  possible    that    the perceptions of  schizophrenics,
people  tripping    on  psychedelics,   and young   children    are,    at  least   in
                    
                      frankie
                      (Frankie)
                      
                    
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