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 ...
Psychologists have long used ambiguous images like this to study perception and cognition. In one controlled study, participants who could toggle between the rabbit and the duck without effort tended ...
The duck-rabbit illusion, originating from a German magazine in 1892 and later referenced by Wittgenstein, demonstrates how perspective shapes perception. Seeing either animal first reveals cognitive ...