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This Online Group Shares Images With Misleading Headlines That Completely Change What We See (30 New Pics)
FunnySEP 8, 2021

This Online Group Shares Images With Misleading Headlines That Completely Change What We See (30 New Pics)

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Neuroscientist Patrick Cavanagh says that “It’s really important to understand we’re not seeing reality.” What we’re seeing instead is “a story that’s being created for us.” In most cases, our brains generate stories that match the physical world, but as we see below in the post, that’s not always the case.
So what if it sees not what there is, but quite literally what we tell it to see? ‘Misleading Thumbnails,’ a subreddit community that shares misleading titles added to images, completely changing what our brain sees in them, may have some answers.
“Not always what you think,” states their slogan, so you get the idea. Let’s get ready to be bamboozled and be sure to check out our previous post with more pictures with misleading thumbnails.

#1 Person Running Through The Snow

Person Running Through The Snow
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425points

#2 Broken Chair

Broken Chair
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337points

#3 Musical Notes

Musical Notes
305points

“As humans, we’re fascinated by optical illusions both because they are a symbol of human creativity and because they demonstrate just how good we are at flexible thinking,” Lisa Yaszek told Bored Panda. Lisa is a Regents Professor of Science Fiction Studies at Georgia Tech where she researches and teaches science fiction as a global language crossing centuries, continents, and cultures.

There is something inherently pleasing about the ability to perceive an image in different ways, argued Lisa, and she wondered if it’s “perhaps it’s part of our natural aptitude for learning.”

“Whatever the source of our love for optical illusions, it’s fascinating to note that the desire to create optical illusions seems to be as old as humanity itself. The prehistoric artists who decorated the Cave of Altima 20,000 years ago used the natural bulges in the rock walls of the cave to give volume and depth to the animals they drew there; the Greek-Egyptian inventor Heron of Alexandria (10CE-70AD) engineered a device that made it look like priests could open temple doors with verbal commands; and the Airavatesvara Temple in India is covered in 800+ year old carvings of animals that change species when viewed from different angles.”

#4 Rare Madagascar Spider

Rare Madagascar Spider
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286points

#5 A Close-Up Photo Of My Sewing Needle Collection

A Close-Up Photo Of My Sewing Needle Collection
283points

#6 Baby Deer Chilling On A Chair

Baby Deer Chilling On A Chair
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271points

The professor said that it’s no surprise that we are in a moment of renewed fascination with optical illusions, as the above examples suggest. “Whenever people invent new creative or technical processes, they use them to create optical illusions! Indeed, we’ve seen this throughout the twentieth and twenty-first centuries: pioneering filmmakers like George Melies drew on vaudeville stagecraft and scratched and painted on celluloid to create the first filmic special effects; Op artists Josef Albers and Bridgette Riley manipulated geometric forms on canvas to convince the eye that unreal spatial places existed; and today we have digital technologies that allow us to radically transform the scale and presentation of images in sometimes truly mind-blowing ways, as we see in these images from the 'Misleading Thumbnails' subreddit community!”

#7 This Guy Has A Massive Afro

This Guy Has A Massive Afro
271points

#8 My Pet Pinecone

My Pet Pinecone
265points

#9 Bring Your Child To Work Day

Bring Your Child To Work Day
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#10 Screaming Human Heads

Screaming Human Heads
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“Of course, there is one difference between earlier optical illusion artists and the ones featured on this subreddit,” Lisa noted and continued: “the former were intentional about creating their optical illusions, while the ones featured on this subreddit probably didn’t mean, for instance, to make a group of adorable puppies look like fried chicken.”

“Having said that—these accidental optical illusions give the members of this subreddit community a chance to become artists themselves by posting the misleading thumbnails and images online so that others can delight in the illusion with them,” she concluded.

#11 Fried Chicken

Fried Chicken
262points

#12 Water Waste Disposal

Water Waste Disposal
260points

#13 This Flawless Egg

This Flawless Egg
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#14 This Little Frog Hiding Out In A Birdhouse...

This Little Frog Hiding Out In A Birdhouse...
246points

Previously, Bored Panda spoke with the moderator team of the Misleading Thumbnails subreddit, who shared some insights on their community. The moderator u/pajam said that r/misleadingthumbnails was created by a user named Noot 9 years ago when he was “scrolling through Reddit and came across this thumbnail.”

The creator couldn't imagine this not being some sort of NSFW image, but then when he opened it and saw the full-size image, he realized it was just a baby pig between two other pigs. “So he was misled by the thumbnail, and thought it was a unique experience blending optical illusions with a sort of 'mind-blown' experience.”

At that point, they realized there was no similar subreddit like this, and the Misleading Thumbnails subreddit was born. Since its creation in 2011, the subreddit is home to 492k members, or as they call them ‘’bamboozled ones.’’

#15 Microscopic View Of A Flesh Eating Maggot

Microscopic View Of A Flesh Eating Maggot
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240points

#16 Got My Shiny Blue Ball Stuck In A Tree

Got My Shiny Blue Ball Stuck In A Tree
230points

#17 My Hand After Gardening

My Hand After Gardening
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222points

#18 Cheeseburger Without Bread

Cheeseburger Without Bread
217points

However, the evolution of the subreddit has become somewhat “frustrating” since Reddit changed its default design. The moderator explained that it used to include thumbnails for every single post, which was normal practice for over a decade.

After there were no thumbnails left, the Misleading Thumbnails made fewer sense with the new design. “New Reddit has made 'Card View' the default view for new users, thus those users won't see any thumbnails whatsoever unless they actively switch to 'Classic View' or change their settings to use the 'Old Reddit' design.”

This proved to be a particular frustration to new members who struggled to get the concept of the whole subreddit. The moderator explained that new viewers would instead treat it like the plethora of other 'Misleading Images' subreddits (/r/Pareidolia, /r/confusing_perspective, /r/forbiddensnacks, etc.). And that wasn’t its original idea.

#19 This Throw-Blanket On A Couch

This Throw-Blanket On A Couch
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211points

#20 Succulent

Succulent
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208points
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