centered image

You’re Exceptionally Creative If You See The Correct Image (Only 1/100 People Can Do This!)

Discussion in 'General Discussion' started by Rana El-Rakhawy, Feb 4, 2017.

  1. Rana El-Rakhawy

    Rana El-Rakhawy Famous Member Verified Doctor

    Joined:
    Aug 8, 2016
    Messages:
    195
    Likes Received:
    11
    Trophy Points:
    450
    Gender:
    Female
    Practicing medicine in:
    Egypt

    What do you see in this drawing that baffled so many people?

    68d010dcee804e7551c03a70ee109fdf.jpg

    Only 1/100 guessed right, but for the rest it was completely mind-boggling.
    Try again. The trick that helped some was to cover the darker side of the image with their hand.

    059138d3a40defcff4a8a64757f3c67a.jpg

    Here comes the spoiler…
    f10afb4e63b0207106f0747a79729767.jpg

    It’s actually a man with a cowboy hat!
    It took some people an entire hour to figure this one out, while the lucky few were able to see it right away. If you belong to the latter group, you can consider yourself a highly creative person as studies show.

    Creative processes have been considered highly abstract and unquantifiable practices, often considered as bursts of sudden inspiration that came out of nowhere. However, scientists have been able to conduct certain researches to catch the creative process in order to analyze the distinctive features that creative people have. What they came to realize was that creative people tend to use much bigger parts of their brain during the thought process. This gives them the opportunity to use more associations and memory when trying to decode something.

    In the case of image deconstruction, creative people have more to work with when looking at an unknown image which means they would much more quickly collect the previously known parts to build ideas.

    Therefore, it is no wonder that to some people this puzzle was way too easy making them wonder what the catch was. However, you shouldn’t think something is wrong with you if no matter how long you looked at the drawing, all you could see was the distorted image of a bat or a rat. It just means that you process new information in a different way, usually in a slightly more formal way, following certain known rules and associations, whereas for creative people, this process includes more “outside the box” kind of thinking with more options to choose from.

    This drawing wasn’t the first one to spur up the conversation about the effect our thinking process has on the way we perceive the world. The famous duck-rabbit dilemma presented by American psychologist Joseph Jastrow in 1899, provided starting point for the research on the topic.

    Before reading any further, stop and look at the drawing.

    What do you see? A duck or a rabbit? Can you easily find the other animal? Can you switch from one perspective to the other with ease, or does it take some effort?

    da2145653a062de386b68e733c47ffd1.jpg

    For this drawing, there is not a wrong or right guess, (even though most people guess duck first) it is rather a question of the ability to quickly switch from one perception to the other.

    All of these features count when determining if you are a highly or average creative person. According to the research Richard Wiseman did with a group of fellow psychologists at the University of Edinburgh, creative people actually perceive the world differently, as they are more able to see things from many different angles.

    Using the duck-rabbit drawing, the participants had to answer questions not much different than the ones above. Additionally, they were asked to list as many unusual usages for given every-day objects in a short amount of time. The results were clear: people who could effortlessly switch from one perception to another, also did much better in assigning new purpose to known objects.

    It is a much known trait of creative people to easily think of alternative ways and to find connection between two apparently unrelated concepts. Their brains are just that much faster when working on interpreting different aspects of a concept. Therefore, the results prove that there is a difference to how highly creative people perceive the world as opposed to average creative ones.

    Finally, if it wasn’t for creative geniuses and their ability to see things from many different perspectives, we would have been deprived of the many discoveries and innovations that helped shape the world as we know it.

    Souce
     

    Add Reply
    Igor Babii likes this.

  2. laina

    laina Young Member

    Joined:
    Feb 11, 2017
    Messages:
    1
    Likes Received:
    1
    Trophy Points:
    15
    Gender:
    Female
    Practicing medicine in:
    Bangladesh
    I got both of them at first glance
     

    Nada El Garhy likes this.

Share This Page

<