I have always been able to resolve stereograms, but with some difficulty. Recently, however, I've tried a few on a computer screen and I find them much easier than on paper. Is there a plausible explanation for this?pic.twitter.com/6VJauHgb32
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I find the process of trying to explain to people what they will (hopefully) see to be interesting in itself. We (I, anyway) have a limited vocabulary to describe our own perceptions.
Olivia I’ve been focusing my eyes on that picture for 2 minutes now and nothing happens. I feel like this is some cruel prank half the world is in on and the rest of us just think they pop out but we can’t see it. #conspiracy
It's hard to describe, but try focusing just in front and just behind, keep changing the exact depth. At some point you should start to see edges appear.
What you are looking for is something like a paper cut-out figure standing a few cm in front of a background of the same paper. (Someone please improve this description!)
Took me a long time to get the text one :-) The top one is really nice. It's also great to see different things pop out each time I look at it - I've seen the "correct" version, but also ones where fragments of the image appear in front of the "correct" bits, in a multiple layers
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