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  • Here's a high plateau on mars, rising up above the surrounding landscape.

  • Oris it a system of valleys and canyonlands cut into the surrounding plains?

  • And here's anotheris this text/image cut into the wood, or is it bumping out?

  • Like the famous duck/rabbit illusion, it can sometimes be hard to perceive both sides of

  • these illusions, so let's try one more: a series of plateaus on earth?

  • Or the grand canyon?

  • These are examples of a multistable perceptual illusion that often comes up when looking

  • at shaded relief maps or aerial and satellite photos of terrain.

  • So why do we sometimes see these features as popping up or out of the image, and why

  • do we sometimes see them as cut or dented in?

  • There are essentially two reasons: First, the fact that on earth the sun is always overhead,

  • and second, a weird symmetry of light and shadows.

  • Ok, so if you're a human who grew up on earth, you're used to the fact that light

  • mostly comes from above.

  • I mean, the sun is always overhead, illuminating things from above, or above and to the side,

  • but never from below the horizon, which means that shadows are pretty much always on the

  • bottoms of things.

  • This is so ingrained in us and our culture that religion talks about falling down into

  • darkness and being raised up into the light, western art exhibits a “top-left lighting

  • convention, as does computer interface design, and the international space station has lights

  • on one side to help give floating astronauts a consistent sense ofupanddown”.

  • AndShadows on the bottom, light on the topgives our brains a way to perceive

  • the 3D-ness of features just from the position of their shadows.

  • If there's a bump sticking out from a wall, the shadow will be on the bottom of the bump.

  • If there's a dent in the wall, the shadow will be on the bottom of the overhang, which

  • means the TOP of the dent.

  • Roughly speaking, when we have no other context and see shadows on the bottom of a feature,

  • we perceive it as convex, coming towards us, and when we see shadows on the top of a feature,

  • we perceive it as concave, or dented away.

  • But there's a cruel symmetry in nature: a concave feature, lit from one side, can

  • cast very similar shadows to its convex counterpart, lit from the other side . A bump lit from

  • above has shadows on the bottom, and a dent lit from below also has shadows on the bottom,

  • which makes it easy to misperceive a dent lit from below as a bump, or a bump lit from

  • below as a dent.

  • Similarly, a mountain range lit from the east has shadows on its western slopes, while a

  • valley lit from the west also has shadows on its western slopes.

  • Not really a problem when you're standing next to the mountain or valley.

  • But viewed from high enough above, all our brains really have to go on for the concavity

  • or convexity of landscape features is their shadows.

  • So we'll tend to see these geographic features as mountains when the shadows are on the bottom,

  • and valleys when shadows are on the top.

  • Which, of course, is only correct if the light happens to be coming from the top of the image.

  • In fact, the mountain or valley illusion is so strong that shaded relief maps of the northern

  • hemisphere generally show light coming from the north, a direction the sun never actually

  • shines in most of those places.

  • Cartographers are more than willing to sacrifice the accuracy of the sun's position to ensure

  • that they accurately communicate the geographic features they're mapping.

  • And it's good they do – I actually decided to make this video after I was looking at

  • a map upside down from across a table, and my brain thought that all the valleys were

  • mountains and mountains were valleys!

  • I had to get up, clear my head and go around to the other side of the table before I could

  • get them to switch to being the right way round.

  • So if you're confused why a map or aerial or satellite photo looks weird, try rotating

  • it 180° to see if it makes more sense!

  • Hey, Henry here, today I thought I'd try something different.

  • I've been wanting to learn how to use Adobe character animator for ages, and it just so

  • happens that this video is sponsored by the online learning site skillshare and they have

  • lessons on character animator.

  • No joke, as of this morning I had no idea how to use this software, and now you're

  • seeing me, in stick figure form, animated in character animator.

  • So yeah, skillshare clearly has lessons for learning stuff, and not just animation: cooking,

  • photography, programming, etc.

  • It's about 10 dollars a month, but you can get two free months by going to skl.sh/MinutePhysics,

  • which also lets skillshare know you were sent there by me in animated stick figure form.

  • Bye!

Here's a high plateau on mars, rising up above the surrounding landscape.

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