Or it’s all a practical joke and you have to do it outside so people will laugh.
Now flip the picture back around right side up (mouth upside down) and if you aren't expecting it then it will quite likely make you jump back in horror. It actually hits some deeply rooted part of our primitive brain that just messes you up. (I just looked this up again, it is the Thatcher effect, and to me it is more frightening when the face is smiling).
Maybe it's the same effect.
1. not honourable in character or purpose.
2. of humble origin or social status.
It’s a play on words, the Ig Nobel prize is the ignoble cousin of the Nobel prize.
>> Many studies place importance on overt, conscious actions like seeing and listening. And some psychologists conclude that people are of one personality type or another based on questionnaires that lack evidence, and which are therefore indistinguishable from fortune-telling.
>> “So, people have biases in their understanding,” explains Higashiyama. “The same importance as placed on sight and hearing has to be placed on physical information as well, and conclusions must be based on evidence. Researchers need to be aware of the fact that the field of psychology runs the risk of changing people’s lives.”
The demonstration was: molars and canines have to have contact, if they don't the vestibular system is out of tilt, put a piece of plastic between them, hip flexors relax, hips get their mobility back, back pain goes away.
Tried it... worked!
edit:linebreak
> The demonstration was: molars and canines have to have contact, if they don't the vestibular system is out of tilt, put a piece of plastic between them, hip flexors relax, hips get their mobility back, back pain goes away.
Does that mean if they aren't touching, your hip flexors relax? Or the piece of plastic makes your molars and canines touch which causes your hip flexors to relax?
When you lost a tooth or had a correction in your youth, they might not fit correctly.
Informing everything in the scene, and establishing iconographically that it is indeed a scene of witchcraft, is the gesture of the witch who, bent on one knee, stares backwards at the world through her own legs. According to a contemporary German proverb those who adopted the pose would be sure to catch sight of the devil. This is perhaps the reason why the motif is also found among the monsters and devils who populate two widely separated versions of that most demonological of picture subjects, the temptation of St Anthony—those of Hieronymus Bosch (c. 1490s) and Jacques Callot (1635).
So it was fascinating to learn from this news article that "There are also regions of Japan where the folklore says that one can see ghosts, the world of spirits and demons, or the future by looking upside down through one’s legs."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Witches_%28Hans_Baldung%29
But where is the witch described in the passage? I don't see anything like it.
https://www.mediastorehouse.co.uk/fine-art-finder/artists/un...
The first sentence is manifestly false. If you take the example image in the article and rotate it 90 degrees, so that the red line is horizontal and the black line is vertical, then it's still the red line that looks longer (admittedly I find the effect is a bit weaker). What's really going on is that the impact of black line's length is reduced by having something halfway along it, while the red line is unbroken.
Either the image represents a different illusion or (and I guess this is really it) it's not that vertical lines necessarily look longer, it's just that, in practice, they're more likely to be unbroken (like the red line) while horizontal lines are more likely to have other things visually impacting their apparent length.
"Is the Horizontal-Vertical Illusion Mainly a By-Product of Petter’s Rule?" - https://www.mdpi.com/2073-8994/12/1/6
I never heard of Ig Nobel Prizes before.
ref. Ig Nobel Prize https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ig_Nobel_Prize
ref. Winners list https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Ig_Nobel_Prize_winners
You're one of today's lucky 10,000. :)
Anyone with a vertical monitor can tell you that :)
They spend a significant portion of the game looking back between their legs, and in addition need to be able to judge accurately to hike the ball so the quarterback gets it correctly, especially when he is in the shotgun position.
> "Higashiyama has misgivings about current-day psychology. Many studies place importance on overt, conscious actions like seeing and listening. And some psychologists conclude that people are of one personality type or another based on questionnaires that lack evidence, and which are therefore indistinguishable from fortune-telling."
Also heard lying on your back and looking at the moon nearly straight up makes it look larger, but it didn't have a noticeable effect when I tried it.
Interesting to see that there's research showing a real effect from this!
So I think the effect described in the article sounds more like a lack of strength, or a strength adapted to lower pressure conditions, while adjusting the lenses.
has this been checked?
I’m sad that these important awards have never gained wider recognition, but perhaps they are too far ahead of their time.
[Higashiyama demonstrating between-the-legs viewing]
I love the Ig Nobels