- @Amrapali #img-anno http://qph.is.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-696f59bb9a0b3e3991455d1010deb2d7?convert_to_webp=true {u'shapes': [{u'geometry': {u'y': 0.784375, u'x': 0.5766666666666667, u'width': 0.030000000000000027, u'height': 0.04999999999999993}, u'type': u'rect'}], u'src': u'http://qph.is.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-696f59bb9a0b3e3991455d1010deb2d7?convert_to_webp=true', u'context': u'http://testapp.swtr.us/?code=3OxoQjZuLAXSQnn638EpGBrQ02Tpxm', u'comment': u'What do you see? Your first reaction is probably that you are looking at a triangle with a black border in the background, and a white triangle upside down on top of it. Of course that\u2019s not really what is there, is it? What\u2019s there are some partial lines and some partial circles. Your brain creates the shape of an upside down triangle out of blank space, because that is what it is expecting to see. This particular illusion is called a Kanizsa triangle, named after an Italian psychologist (G. Kanizsa) that first came up with it in 1955.'} created: Fri, 04 Jul 2014, 07:28 AM UTC