- #1
gravenewworld
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and if you have seen this before SHHHHHHHHHHHhhh! Posters, don't spoil it in a response please.
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gravenewworld said:
and if you have seen this before SHHHHHHHHHHHhhh!
Posters, don't spoil it in a response please.
Evo said:Oops. wrong color MIH. Who knows the new color for invisible text?
MIH said:I study cognitive psychology so I've seen this done many different ways in experiments on inattentional blindness. The most interesting one, I have seen is this:
TheStatutoryApe said:I
Sorry MIH but not all men prefer blondes ;-p , or even large hood ornaments for that matter. Unfortunately that brunette looks to be about 15. :-/
B. Elliott said:A timeless concept!
Math Is Hard said:
Or maybe have all males that one by one drop off screen and are replaced by similarly dressed females.Math Is Hard said:This experiment has been done over and over and over and over..
sometimes it's a person in a gorilla suit. sometimes it's a person with an umbrella. The "count the basketball passes" experimental paradigm is pretty standard.
Would be kind of interesting to try it with a sexy girl/guy walking through the scene and see if it makes any difference.
MIH said:Here is a video on the attention system and things we miss:
I know.MIH said:and I could care less about brunettes or blondes. It was a joke.
mattmns said:I didn't think her breasts were fake, but I will agree that her hair (the "blonde") looks horrible.
The OP is really old in some sense: isn't this a really old concept (the basketballs and gorilla)?
Kurdt said:Looks like a BMW 5 series with an E28 body style in production from 1982 - 1988. If I had to guess I'd say it was a 528.
Math Is Hard said:This experiment has been done over and over and over and over..
sometimes it's a person in a gorilla suit. sometimes it's a person with an umbrella. The "count the basketball passes" experimental paradigm is pretty standard.
Would be kind of interesting to try it with a sexy girl/guy walking through the scene and see if it makes any difference.
Here is a video on the attention system and things we miss:
and I could care less about brunettes or blondes. It was a joke.
BobG said:Looking at the report mattmns linked to, it looks like a person would see a woman with an umbrella easier than a gorilla. And it's easier to see the gorilla if you're counting passes of the black team. That seems counter-intuitive. You'd think the more bizarre the interruption, the more noticeable it would be. Instead, the easier it is to discard the interruption as irrelevant to your task, the less noticeable the interruption is. It looks like it works as an attention filter.
So why do drivers have such a hard time seeing motorcycles and bicycles? Because they've mentally conditioned themselves to look for cars. Motorcycles, bicycles, and pedestrians are filtered out of drivers' attention.
B. Elliott said:Nevermind.
You know just stringing words together doesn't automatically mean they make sense.rewebster said:too large breasts
"I bet 95% of you will miss this" is a phrase commonly used in puzzles or brain teasers to challenge people to find a hidden or difficult-to-spot element. It implies that only a small percentage of people will be able to solve the puzzle or find the hidden object.
The phrase is called "I bet 95% of you will miss this" because it is a statement of confidence that the majority of people will not be able to solve the puzzle or find the hidden element. It also adds an element of competition and challenge to the puzzle.
The number 95% is often used in this phrase as a way to exaggerate the difficulty of the puzzle or challenge. It implies that the task is so difficult that only a small percentage of people will be able to solve it.
To improve your chances of not missing "I bet 95% of you will miss this", you can practice solving puzzles and brain teasers, and train your mind to think creatively and critically. You can also pay close attention to details and think outside the box when approaching challenges.
While "I bet 95% of you will miss this" may be used as clickbait in some cases, it is also used genuinely in puzzles and challenges to add an element of competition and difficulty. The phrase itself may be overused, but the concept behind it is still valid in challenging people's problem-solving skills.