- Mar 3, 2013
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Some people see the old lady first. Thats an old one. I remember they used it in my sociology class in college.I can see both but if I just allow the eyes' first impression I see the young woman.
That's prolly because the older woman is misshapen and you have to suspend reality and imagine a nose like that. Plus there's something hanging off her right eye. So the younger woman is the more realistic.
Are you referring to the young girl with the hat or the old lady with the scarf
The other end has 3 though.
I gotta go four. It's the ends.
Are you referring to the young girl with the hat or the old lady with the scarf
I think what matters is what you focus on in the picture. If you try to find the eye of the young lady then you see her. If you focus on the eye of the old hag then thats what you see.I saw the young lady first, and I'm well over 30.
- The drawing shows both a young woman looking away, and an old lady's profile.
- The study claims that whichever woman you see first depends on your age — people between 18 and 30 tended to see the young woman first, whereas people over 30 first spotted the older woman.
had to look at the next picture to see the old lady at all.
Shit. Thats fucking with my eyes.
Ah I see. The middle frame is the key.
At first, the young lady.
Does this mean I should run for office?
Ah I see. The middle frame is the key.
The middle on has no depth perception clues. If you pair the middle with the one on the left they will spin together. Same on the right.Ah I see. The middle frame is the key.
If I look at the middle one first she's going clockwise. If I then glance at the right one she's going anticlockwise, and then I can't get the middle one back to where she started.