The Recipe
Your brain does not passively record the world like a camera. It actively guesses what is out there based on past experiences. These guesses are called predictions. When you see a friend's face in a crowd, your brain predicts 'friend' before fully checking every detail. This shortcut saves energy.
What Goes Wrong?
Sometimes the prediction is too strong. If you expect to hear rain, but it is just wind hitting the window, your brain might trick you into hearing drums. This happens because the brain prefers a smooth story over perfect accuracy. It fills in gaps with its best guess. So, when you wake up and look at your room, you are not seeing raw data. You are seeing a carefully built model of reality that your mind created just for you.
Examples
- Reading messy handwriting without noticing every weird loop.
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See also
- What causes deja vu, and how does the brain explain it?
- Why Do We Feel 'Déjà Vu'?
- Why Do We Need Dreams If They Make No Sense?
- Why Do We Remember Dreams But Forget Them Minutes Later?
- Is Free Will an Illusion?