This work examines systems used to understand and relay information, underlining the consequences of their structure. In a digital image the pixel (picture element) has specific information that determines its size, placement, and color. When arranged together pixels can create a complete and recognizable image. I take these images, portraits of people, and infuse them with further information gathered from surveys about their reaction to their image. The sizes of the pixels in their portrait are enlarged depending on how positively they respond, altering one criteria of pixel information. The pixels are numbered to ensure they are resized in a specific order. Because this numbering begins in the center of the image and spirals out clockwise pixels begin to overlap when their size varies too greatly. The loss from this overlap is irretrievable. It is a characteristic of the algorithm that this system is not reversible (i.e. the original image cannot be created from final image) but it illustrates how information and its presentation are completely dependent on their definition and construction to be understood.