Popular Science - USA (2019-10)

(Antfer) #1
POPSCI.COM • WINTER 2019 109

HEAD
T

R


I


P


by Nicole Wetsman

SEEING DOUBLE

signal in


the noise


THE IMAGE ABOVE MIGHT SEEM LIKE
an arbitrary design, but amid the repeat-
ing noise is a carefully calibrated pattern.
It hides a three- dimensional object— until
it doesn’t. Hold the page close, focus as if
you’re looking through or beyond it, and
slowly move it away. What can you see?
In the 1990s, these illusions were on best-
seller lists, classroom posters, and sitcoms
like Seinfeld. But they aren’t just silly gags,
according to Jeremy Wilmer, a psychologist
at Wellesley College. The motifs are auto-
stereograms: two-dimensional pictures
that produce 3D ones thanks to our binocu-
lar vision. Each of our eyes sees a slightly

different angle on an object. When we focus
our peepers, the visual cortex fuses what
they take in and uses the differences be-
tween the views to gauge depth. Here, small
pieces of the repeating pattern are shifted
to create the so-called depth cues that give
rise to the hidden shape. At a casual glance,
the scene just looks funky. But try crossing
and uncrossing your eyes, and your noggin
will interpret parts of the image as if they’re
on different planes from one another, mak-
ing the secret figure suddenly pop out of the
page. (The answer is in the crease to the left.)
If you still can’t see it, try to relax—it could
appear when you least expect it.

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