The image you have about yourself is the one in the mirror, beacuse it is what you've seen most of your life, so when you see yourself in pictures, your brain feels that something is wrong. The lens of a camera introduces barrel distortion. This makes you look more like a ball than the way you see yourself in a mirror.
Mirrors are much more accurate than camera images. This, of course, assumes the mirror is plane and flat. We are not talking about trick mirrors or the type of mirrors that are designed to create distortion.
Does camera show your real face? A photograph of you is your real face. When you look at the image of yourself in a mirror, you are looking at the reflection of your face, your face is exactly opposite what you see. A picture of you is most accurate as to what you look like, as the image faces the right direction.
There's a difference between your image in the mirror and in photos. The image you see in the mirror is reversed compared to the image that others see face-to-face with you. Your friends are familiar with your non-reversed image, while you are familiar with your reversed image in a regular mirror.
Hold two hand mirrors in front of you with their edges touching and a right angle between them like the two covers of a book when you're reading. With a little adjustment you can get a complete reflection of your face as others see it. Wink with your right eye. The person in the mirror winks his or her right eye.
This is because the reflection you see every day in the mirror is the one you perceive to be original and hence a better-looking version of yourself. So, when you look at a photo of yourself, your face seems to be the wrong way as it is reversed than how you are used to seeing it.
I found the front camera gives more pleasing pictures than the back one, for example, the pictures taken by the back one often shows my eyes are proportionally smaller. Also the front camera seems to produce completely dark pictures when the lighting isn't good, while the back camera can still produce clearer pictures.
The front facing camera does not mirror the video it takes. It mirrors the display when you are taking it, so it looks like what you would see in a mirror. The saved video is in the correct orientation. This is done to aid in taking the photos and videos.
When you take a photo of yourself using some (but not all) apps or the front-facing camera on an iPhone, the resulting image captures your face as others see it. The same is true for non-phone cameras.
Strangers see you exactly how you reflect in the mirror.
Those who know you see you as you deliver in speech and action which is the real you. Someone who is looking directly at you sees you as you see yourself in a mirror.
Every photo in existence is altered and constrained by many factors, including the camera itself, the focal length of the lens we use, lighting and posing of the subject and the perspective from which the photo was taken.
But if we compare the selfie image and mirror, mirror is more accurate because selfie picture differes with phones and app you use to take selfie. If you compre the selfie taken with phone camera and messenger, instagram, you will find difference in quality and focal length as well.
Specifically, science of the brain. We are used to identifying with our faces as they would appear in a mirror, but when we take a selfie, the camera captures our faces as strangers would see us from head on rather than we would see ourselves in a reflection.
The mirror is a reflection.
It's a reflection, so it shows how we look like in reverse. Because we're so used to seeing the reverse version of ourselves, seeing how we look in pictures can be jarring. And unless you're blessed with a perfectly symmetrical face, the photo version of yourself can be even more wonky.
A new study shows that 20% of people see you as more attractive than you do. When you look in the mirror, all you see is your appearance. When others look at you they see something different such as personality, kindness, intelligence, and sense of humor. All these factors make up a part of a person's overall beauty.
In a series of studies, Epley and Whitchurch showed that we see ourselves as better looking than we actually are. The researchers took pictures of study participants and, using a computerized procedure, produced more attractive and less attractive versions of those pictures.
Seeing someone deeply involves sincerely investing in that person so they feel genuinely heard and understood. It requires a considerable amount of self-discipline and attentional focus because seeing others deeply demands that you be fully present in your interactions with them.
A camera has only one eye, so photography flattens images in a way that mirrors do not. Also, depending on the focal length and distance from the subject, the lens can create unflattering geometric distortions.
When you look in a mirror, you see a mirror image of yourself. What everyone else sees when they look at you in person, is the opposite, i.e. right and left flipped. Therefore on that basis, a picture taken by a camera is a more accurate representation of what people see when they look at you.
Actually it does not make you look better. The mirror only inverts the image along an axis parallel with your two eyes. It doesn't make you look prettier or more handsome. If you are comparing the image to a selfie, it's the selfie that makes you look bad.
The camera lens is not the human eye
It's called lens distortion and it can render your nose, eyes, hips, head, chest, thighs and all the rest of it marginally bigger, smaller, wider or narrower than they really are.
There's another psychological bias that affects us when looking at pictures of ourselves. It's called the confirmation bias. It's the bias that makes you hate you. The confirmation bias is our tendency to search for and find information that backs up our previously held beliefs.
If we don't have that inner feeling of self worth, we allow external images to dictate how we feel about ourselves.. which is why we dread or are scared of being photographed because we don't want to feel negative emotions about ourselves if the photo isn't what we think it should look like.
Seeing requires perception on the part of the person who is looking. To look means to gaze upon something with your eyes and acknowledge its presence. But to see requires time, patience, open mindedness and, sometimes even effort.