When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Ambiguous image - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambiguous_image

    Ambiguous images or reversible figures are visual forms that create ambiguity by exploiting graphical similarities and other properties of visual system interpretation between two or more distinct image forms. These are famous for inducing the phenomenon of multistable perception. Multistable perception is the occurrence of an image being able ...

  3. List of optical illusions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_optical_illusions

    An autostereogram is a single-image stereogram (SIS), designed to create the visual illusion of a three-dimensional (3D) scene from a two-dimensional image in the human brain. An ASCII stereogram is an image that is formed using characters on a keyboard. Magic Eye is an autostereogram book series. Barberpole illusion

  4. Multistable perception - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multistable_perception

    Examples of visually ambiguous patterns. From top to bottom: Necker cube, Schroeder stairs and a figure that can be interpreted as black or white arrows. Multistable perception (or bistable perception) is a perceptual phenomenon in which an observer experiences an unpredictable sequence of spontaneous subjective changes.

  5. Optical illusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_illusion

    The phi phenomenon is yet another example of how the brain perceives motion, which is most often created by blinking lights in close succession. The ambiguity of direction of motion due to lack of visual references for depth is shown in the spinning dancer illusion. The spinning dancer appears to be moving clockwise or counterclockwise ...

  6. Ambigram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambigram

    Ambiguous images, of which ambigrams are a part, cause ambiguity in different ways. For example, by rotational symmetry, as in the Illusion of The Cook by Giuseppe Arcimboldo (1570); [ 156 ] sometimes by a figure-ground ambivalence as in Rubin vase ; by perceptual shift as in the rabbit–duck illusion , or through pareidolias ; or again, by ...

  7. Ambiguity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambiguity

    This image can be interpreted three ways: as the letters "K B", as the mathematical inequality "1 < 13", or as the letters "V D" with their mirror image. [10] In visual art, certain images are visually ambiguous, such as the Necker cube, which can be interpreted in two ways.

  8. Boomers are sad they may never be grandparents as fewer ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/boomers-sad-may-never...

    For example, 72% of survey respondents with grandchildren say they hardly ever feel isolated compared with 62% of those without grandchildren. Why younger families aren’t having kids.

  9. Necker cube - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Necker_cube

    The Necker cube is an optical illusion that was first published as a rhomboid in 1832 by Swiss crystallographer Louis Albert Necker. [1] It is a simple wire-frame, two dimensional drawing of a cube with no visual cues as to its orientation, so it can be interpreted to have either the lower-left or the upper-right square as its front side.