Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/12/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Admiral Rickover, in a Naval Reactors Technical Bulletin, observed that in critical situations there's a real tendency to see what you want to see and to disbelieve indications that are directly contrary to your belief. Three Mile Island had several such occurances - where the plant operators disbelieved reliable instruments in favor of an easier scenerio. Any situation that requires the piecing together of information into a mosaic has the same problem. Intelligence analysis is fraught with this as the lead-in to the Iraq War demonstrates. (Here I'll take the most benign interpretation that the failure wasn't willful, something I do NOT wish to argue.) I'm not sure exactly what struck B. D. with regard to his student's photography because I don't know what image he'd like us to see. Or was it a film? On Wed, 15 Dec 2004 11:36:53 -0500, Richard S. Taylor <r.s.taylor@comcast.net> wrote: > B.D. - I reread the New Yorker article this morning. The article > quite rightly identifies the role of interpretation in identifying > objects in very low signal-to-noise ratio (i.e., fuzzy, high-grain) > images. In such a situation we will all tend to see what we want, or > expect to see. > > Unless you're talking about abstract work, surely most Leica > photography has a very high signal-to-noise ratio (sharp, low-grain) > with easily identified subjects, so I don't see the connection. >