There’s little that Internet denizens love more than a snazzy personality test—cat videos, maybe, or perpetual outrage. One trend that has gained popularity over the last several years is personality ...
Check out the drawing below, which was published around 1892 in a German magazine. Do you see an animal? Do you see two? According to a psychologist, your ability to flip between seeing a rabbit and a ...
Some of you must have stopped looking at it, thinking, “Where’s the debate? It’s clearly a rabbit,” while for others, “It’s clearly a duck.” This is a classic example of a 6 for you, which may be a 9 ...
Ambigous figures are drawings that seem to flip from being one thing to another. Psychologists Melissa Allen and Alison Chambers recently showed these images to teenagers with autism in an attempt to ...
More than 100 years after it was first sketched, an image still depicts either a rabbit or a duck – depending on how quickly and creatively your brain works. Recently making rounds on social media is ...
Illusions aren’t just fun to look at — they reveal how your brain really works. One famous image, which looks like both a duck and a rabbit, shows how your mind makes choices without you even noticing ...
The illustration is supposed to point out that what you see is not completely based on what is being looked at, but is party due to what’s happening in your brain, according to Wolfram MathWorld.
Ever heard of a personality test based on an optical illusion? The challenge keeps you engaged and reveals certain aspects of your personality as well. In this type of brain teaser, what you see first ...
In a statement, the couple said “Duck! Rabbit!,” is one of Archie’s “favorite” books. The story by Amy Krouse Rosenthal is about the optical illusion where a picture looks like both a duck and a ...
Perhaps you saw the Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s sweet video of Meghan reading to Archie on his first birthday, but did you catch which book it was? “Duck! Rabbit!” is a 2009 collaboration between the ...
Even today, kids know about Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Porky Pig. But here’s the thing: most modern children think of the Looney Tunes characters as nothing more than commercial mascots, designed to ...
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