Now if we could just get the girl on page one to spin with the girl on page two and see where it goes from there Jedi
Ok....How about this.. Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH My brain just turned into a mash potato like mush, and drained out my ears. Reasoning: bottom ones except right corner are going counter clock wise, the rest...clock wise.
She goes clockwise for me. No question I am right brained...I thrive in creative environments and doing creative tasks. I am left handed as well. Not even going to bother trying to get her to change direction. RMX
7. Dancer Silhouette: A popular reversible figure has appeared recently in the Australian press. This was invented by Nobuyuki Kayahara and has provoked enormous reaction on the web, along with some ill-informed criticism. Not many commentators have recognised this as an example of perceptual rivalry and none that I have seen have noted our original suggestion that links perceptual rivalry to interhemispheric switching. It is ventured that a clockwise spinning dancer indicates a right hemisphere in control; vice versa for the left hemisphere. This is consonant with our thesis that the opposite percepts represent opposite hemispheres and goes a step further by attributing one hemisphere to a particular direction of motion. dancer. We were able to do this recently for plaid motion rivalry, where the component, "sliding" percept is apparently a right hemisphere phenomenon, whereas the left hemisphere percept is the coherent, "diamonds moving upwards" ( see 15 below). Here is the Website.. http://www.procreo.jp/labo.html and several youtube vids associated with this... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vgWoaA5xYPE