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The illusion derives from the lack of visual cues for depth .... These results can be explained by a psychological study providing evidence for a viewing-from-above bias that influences observers' perceptions of the silhouette .... If observers report perceiving Kayahara's original silhouette as spinning clockwise more often than anti-clockwise, there are two chief possibilities. They may have a bias to see it spinning clockwise, or they may have a bias to assume a viewpoint from above. ..... In popular psychology, the illusion has been incorrectly identified as a personality test that supposedly reveals which hemisphere of the brain is dominant in the observer. Under this wrong interpretation, it has been popularly called the Right Brain–Left Brain test, and was widely circulated on the Internet during late 2008 to early 2009.
The illusion derives from the lack of visual cues for depth .... These results can be explained by a psychological study providing evidence for a viewing-from-above bias that influences observers' perceptions of the silhouette .... If observers report perceiving Kayahara's original silhouette as spinning clockwise more often than anti-clockwise, there are two chief possibilities. They may have a bias to see it spinning clockwise, or they may have a bias to assume a viewpoint from above. ..... In popular psychology, the illusion has been incorrectly identified as a personality test that supposedly reveals which hemisphere of the brain is dominant in the observer. Under this wrong interpretation, it has been popularly called the Right Brain–Left Brain test, and was widely circulated on the Internet during late 2008 to early 2009.