Why is the Mona Lisa smiling? Or is she?

Dr. Margaret Livingstone, a Professor of Neurobiology at the Harvard Medical School, has been studying the human visual system, and specifically how we process visual information. Although I find that this can be a fairly dry topic, she has applied her understanding of how vision works to offer an explanation for why the Mona Lisa’s smile always seems so elusive!

The separate processing of color and form information has a parallel in artists’ idea that color and luminance play very different roles in art (Livingstone, Vision and Art, Abrams Press, 2002). The elusive quality of the Mona Lisa’s smile can be explained by the fact that her smile is almost entirely in low spatial frequencies, and so is seen best by your peripheral vision (Science, 290, 1299). These three images show her face filtered to show selectively lowest (left) low (middle) and high (right) spatial frequencies.

So when you look at her eyes or the background, you see a smile like the one on the left, or in the middle, and you think she is smiling. But when you look directly at her mouth, it looks more like the panel on the right, and her smile seems to vanish. The fact that the degree of her smile varies so much with gaze angle makes her expression dynamic, and the fact that her smile vanishes when you look directly at it, makes it seem elusive.

Livingstone Sample

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