Entry tags:
Follow the bouncing ball
[posted by
jasra...]
Go to the following link, and try to keep count of how many times the basketball is passed between the white-shirted players. Link.
Did you notice the gorilla? If not, go watch it again.
Isn't inattentional blindness (third blue bar) fun?
Oh, I love Scientific American Mind. Now if only some of the other really fascinating articles from this month were available for free.
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Go to the following link, and try to keep count of how many times the basketball is passed between the white-shirted players. Link.
Did you notice the gorilla? If not, go watch it again.
Isn't inattentional blindness (third blue bar) fun?
Oh, I love Scientific American Mind. Now if only some of the other really fascinating articles from this month were available for free.
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What it was meant to say was, "there are a lot of other cool demos on that page, too". I'm really fond of the live-action interruption one (with the door).
The neat thing is I got to write a bunch of this stuff into a recent proposal; perhaps I'll be using it in more depth in a few months, if we get awarded that contract...
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I hope you get awarded the contract. That would be fascinating work.
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http://improbable.com/ig/ig-pastwinners.html
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Impossible for me to know if I'd notice it.
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Agreed on the biker thing. No need to say more on that.
A friend of mine tells a story where he was driving along, minding his own business, on a road he drove a lot, and then there was this boulder in the middle of the road. It wasn't around a blind corner or anything - it was clearly visible for quite a few seconds before he got to it. And yet, because the last thing he ever expected to see was a boulder the size of a Volkswagen in the middle of the road, his brain just couldn't process it. It was only at the last possible second that he managed to swerve around it, despite having lots and lots of warning.