Pretty Life-Size Face

This site takes a few seconds to load and provides — once you zoom in — a pretty face close to life-size, which is what you need to get the mood effect I describe in Example 2 of my long self-experimentation paper. I usually use a mirror to get a life-size face but I will try this one instead.

8 Responses to “Pretty Life-Size Face”

  1. nathan Says:

    she’s kind of creepy-looking with those bloodshot eyes…

  2. Timothy Beneke Says:

    Pretty powerful image; you might warn people to avoid staring at it at night…
    Maybe I’ll try to spend some morning time with it…

  3. seth Says:

    yes, the bloodshot eyes are puzzling.

  4. gabe Says:

    Any reason to believe that it’s being on screen has any additional effect? Could a large portrait on the wall be just as effective?

  5. seth Says:

    When I studied this effect, I found that distance mattered. The best distance was roughly the distance you’d be from someone when having a conversation with them. A large portrait on the wall would not be as effective if the face was larger than usual and you stood further away.

  6. Seth’s blog » Blog Archive » The American Time Use Survey: Valuable Info? Says:

    […] Pretty Life-Size Face […]

  7. Levinson Says:

    Simulation might be another route to get more faces. This work at Stanford looks interesting:

    http://graphics.stanford.edu/~sifakis/

  8. Jeff Winkler Says:

    She definitely falls into the uncanny valley..especially on the smile.

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