Sharp Brains: Brain Fitness and Cognitive Health News

Brain Games: Spot the Difference

How many differences can you spot?

You have seen and maybe tried that exercise or game in the Sunday paper many times: find 5 differences between the two images.

You may like it or not. You may think it is only for kids. But it is a GREAT brain exercise!

Let’s see what cognitive processes and which brain areas are involved in this exercise:

- You have to identify the objects that you see: this involves your occipital lobes the brain(in red, below)
- You have to analyzed the spatial relationships between the objects that you see: this involves your occipital and parietal (in green) lobes
- You have to remember what you see in one picture and compare it to what you see in the other picture, that is you have to use your short-term memory: this involves your frontal (in blue) and parietal lobes
- You have to mark down the locations where you see a difference: this involves mostly your frontal lobes (for the movement)

Did you realize that so much was going on in your brain during that seemingly simple exercise?

I bet not! So… why not give it a try??

 

Can you find 5 differences between the two pictures below?

 

Brain teasers

mind teasers

 

Answers:

- One of the characters on the white sign (top right)
- Sign on the grey wall (bottom left)
-Tail of the big fish on the left side of the building
- Posting on the sign leaning on the building on the right side of the building
- One of the small wooden characters on the left side of the building, under the big fish

 

You can enjoy these additional Brain Teasers.

Pascale Michelon— This article was written by Pascale Michelon, Ph. D., for SharpBrains.com. Dr. Michelon, Copyright 2008. Dr. Michelon has a Ph.D. in Cognitive Psychology and has worked as a Research Scientist at Washington University in Saint Louis, in the Psychology Department. She conducted several research projects to understand how the brain makes use of visual information and memorizes facts. She is now an Adjunct Faculty at Washington University, and teaches Memory Workshops in numerous retirement communities in the St Louis area.

Categories: Brain Teasers, Cognitive Neuroscience, Education & Lifelong Learning

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Print This Article Print This Article

15 Responses

  1. R Keene says:

    It is very easy if you can go cross-eyed and merge the two pictures visually. It took me about 5 seconds to find all the differences. There is an additional difference where the vertical sign in the middle has a whiter edge in the left picture. Also just over the woman’s head that is in front of the store there is a single darker pixel.

  2. J. Cardinal says:

    Thank you for the information on areas of the brain involved in this exercise! Without knowing what was happening in the brain, I felt that this game was a good way to help someone focus their attention.

    I teach mathematics at a technical high school in a mid-sized city. Last year I began giving ‘Find the Differences’ puzzles to my students as an opening exercise. They loved it!

    I was happy simply because the students were focused on work. However, I was unsure what the administration would have felt about this exercise in a high school. Now that I know so much is happening in the brain, I will hang a copy of this information in my classroom for all to see and learn!

  3. Alvaro says:

    Very good idea to use exercises like this to open the class. As you point out, it serves as a great transition into a more focused mindset.

    Pascale will be happy to see this teaser is making it into your classroom wall :-)

  4. denise says:

    Thanks for a fun puzzle. This is very much like the trouble with proofreading: My mind tends to “fill in” the missing parts, making them hard to notice — and yet how clearly they stand out once I spot them! I haven’t mastered R Keene’s cross-eyed trick, so it took me longer than 5 seconds…

  5. Michealson says:

    Yes, I love all puzzles only because they help my brain focus and exercise, I love psychology, anyways, like R Keene said about the woman I noticed that her left arm(the one that is stretched out) her white clothing is hanging differently the bottom one has more of it hanging than the top, I thought that was one of the changes so I finished but was dissapointed to find out I was wrong, anyways I just wanted to point that one out in case no one saw that.

  6. Michealson says:

    OH! and if you or anyone else has any usefull websites about philosophers and/or psychologist, please let me know, and I mean any, famous or not, I love learning about others, it helps me get an understanding of basic human instint(I’m only 15 but for my summer break I finally have time to research about it on others to get a better understanding myself) anyways thank you for the sites!!!

  7. jt91495 says:

    i cannot do the crosseyed thing but i still got it but it took 2 minutes to find all of them

  8. jt91495 says:

    And michealson is right i thought that is what it was too

  9. Alvaro says:

    Hello Michaelson,

    Encephalon blog carnival is a great entry point into excellent psychology and neuroscience blogs, you can check the most recent edition here

    http://neuroanthropology.net/2008/06/23/encephalon-48-the-usual-suspects/

    Enjoy!

  10. Hello everybody,
    I did not touch the woman’s clothing when I prepared the pictures… I checked by blowing the 2 pictures up and I still can’t see the differences that you guys are talking about… anyway! I did make our brains work!!

  11. At least I now know that these are good for my kids (who love them).

  12. stacey says:

    in one picture (top) the woman is looking straigt ahead, the other she is looking up

  13. Tyler says:

    Thanks for the game, my brain needed the practise :D

  14. W P says:

    Riiight a “darker” pixel is part of the change lol.. oh hey look I just saw 999999999 changes due to the displacement of air molecules lol..

  15. W P says:

    You guys need to stop making up bonus changes that you think you see.
    There are five and five only..

Top 30 Articles

  1. Top 50 Brain Teasers, by SharpBrains Team
  2. The Ten Habits of Highly Effective Brains, by Alvaro Fernandez
  3. Why do You Turn Down the Radio When You're Lost?, by Caroline Latham
  4. Brain Plasticity: How learning changes your brain, by Pascale Michelon
  5. Top 10 Brain Fitness Future Trends, by Alvaro Fernandez
  6. 7 FAQs on Mental Exercise, by Alvaro Fernandez
  7. It is Not Only Cars That Deserve Good Maintenance: Brain Care 101, by Alvaro Fernandez
  8. Evaluation Checklist for Brain Fitness products and games, by Alvaro Fernandez
  9. MIT Event on Brain Games: Context, Trends, Questions, by Alvaro Fernandez
  10. Stress Management Workshop for International Women's Day, by Alvaro Fernandez
  11. Mindfulness and Meditation in Schools for Stress Management, by Jill Sutie
  12. Stress and Neural Wreckage: Part of the Brain Plasticity Puzzle, by Gregory Kellet
  13. How can I improve my short term memory?, by Caroline Latham
  14. Cognitive and Emotional Development Through Play, by David Elkind
  15. Judith Beck: Train Your Brain to Think Like a Thin Person, by Alvaro Fernandez
  16. Easy Steps to Improve Brain Health, by Caroline Latham
  17. Infographic: State of the Market 2009, by Paul Van Slembrouck
  18. Improve Memory with Sleep, Practice, and Testing, by Bill Klemm
  19. 10 Brain Tips To Teach and Learn, by Laurie Bartels
  20. Dr. Elkhonon Goldberg on Cognitive Training and Brain Fitness, by Alvaro Fernandez
  21. Maximize the Cognitive Value of Your Mental Workout, by Schlomo Breznitz
  22. Brain Fitness Program and Neuroplasticity @ PBS, by Alvaro Fernandez
  23. Mindfulness Meditation for Adults & Teens with ADHD, by David Rabiner
  24. Can Intelligence Be Trained? Martin Buschkuehl shows how, by Alvaro Fernandez
  25. How Strong is the Research Support for Neurofeedback in Attention Deficits?, by David Rabiner
  26. Exercising the body is exercising the mind, by Adrian Preda
  27. Brain Evolution and Why it is Meaningful Today to Improve Our Brain Health, by Larry McCleary
  28. Physical Exercise and Brain Health, by Pascale Michelon
  29. Posit Science, Nintendo Brain Age, and Brain Training Topics, by Alvaro Fernandez
  30. Sleep, Tetris, Memory and the Brain, by Shannon Moffet

Register Today

Events

Monthly Blog Archives