When I first see it I see it as clockwise, but in a second I can change it to counter-clockwise.
When I look away for about 30 seconds to a minute and look back, I see counter-clockwise still. Interesting
And then sometimes I can see it go clockwise, then turn back counter-clockwise, and then go clockwise again...
Yeah, only 4. And it's weird because all the right-brainers are meant to be
more "feeling" and "intuitive" rather than "logical" and "mathematical" like
the left-brainers.
PB wrote:> interesting how many coders are left brained
Yeah, only 4. And it's weird because all the right-brainers are meant to be
more "feeling" and "intuitive" rather than "logical" and "mathematical" like
the left-brainers.
Yeah, it seems completely backward, I would consider myself to be logical etc, does anyone else think that the description has been messed up?
Derek wrote:Yeah, it seems completely backward, I would consider myself to be logical etc, does anyone else think that the description has been messed up?
Well, I think I am but if I'm not then it wouldn't be logical to think I am so logically thinking I must be, unless I'm not logical and just emotional in which case I'm just letting my feelings get in the way which is a very illogical thing to do and therefore logically thinking I must be emotional.
For me, I first saw it counter-clockwise/anti-clockwise, then I saw it go clockwise after reading the accompanying article.
...just a thought, anybody tried decompiling the gif animation? maybe they actually have it going both ways ....messing with anyone who comes across it.
i saw it counter-clockwise first and it took me long to manage to see it
moving in reverse. and when i got it, i couldn't switch back. that was some
days ago. now i saw her turning clockwise first.
@RTEK
what do you mean by decompiling? you can extract the frames with an
imageviewer/-manipulation. i did it and you can still see it both ways [typo]
Last edited by #NULL on Fri Oct 12, 2007 7:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
It seems that my brain will capture the first frame of the image, make a quick decision on what the animation is doing, and then stores that information (memory) so whenever I look at it I see with the same direction.
If I hide the whole image except the the woman's shadow I can reorient my brain and and then change direction.
It's a nice trick but can someone confirm if this left/right brain test is valid?