This picture broke my brain [3B1B video]

(youtube.com)

73 points | by jgwil2 4 days ago

7 comments

  • manudaro 1 minute ago
    I've been loking into how 3B1B builds their rendering pipeline, and it's honestly mind blowing. They use Python along with custom OpenGl shaders to handle most of geometric transformations, shich seems to be what creates those "brain breaking" visual effects.It's fascinating how our visual cortex tries to interpret overlapping geometric patterns and ends up producing such counterintuitive perceptions. Shat I still can't quite wrap my hand around is... to what extent are these effects caused by the rendering itself, and how much of it is just how our brain interprets the visual information?
  • boriskourt 1 hour ago
    This video is an absolute tour de force of communicating a complex concept.
    • JKCalhoun 34 minutes ago
      Seems like you could apply the clever transforms to generate a displacement map (that then allows you to move it across any source image and quickly get the Droste effect).

      (I still have not made it all the way to the end of the video though, perhaps that is where they end up.)

    • dmbche 1 hour ago
      All of 3Blue1Brown is - hoghly highly recommend
      • boriskourt 1 hour ago
        I've seen most! Highlighting this one out of them all. Exemplary! : D
  • m-hodges 1 hour ago
    The title I get when I click on this is, "How (and why) to take a logarithm of an image"
    • peesem 1 hour ago
      YouTube has A/B testing features that allow videos to have multiple titles and/or thumbnails.
      • m-hodges 1 hour ago
        Right. So I thought it would be helpful to share the more-descriptive title that I got.
      • dandanua 37 minutes ago
        I'm sorry, what? Can people now see different titles? Insanity, if true.
    • sva_ 1 hour ago
      For me it is "Decoding Escher's most mind-bending piece"
  • OscarCunningham 33 minutes ago
    I've been wondering if you could do a similar thing for a Droste effect image containing two copies of itself. Packs of Laughing Cow cheese show a cow with two earrings, each of which is a pack of the cheese.
  • Jeff_Brown 1 hour ago
    I love 3B1B but generally don't have time to watch long videos. Can anyone sum up the punchline?
    • ahns 1 hour ago
      One of Dutch artist M.C. Escher's works is a man is admiring a piece of art that itself depicts the building the (very same) man is in [0]. Escher left out the middle bit of the painting, probably since it's fairly complicated, putting his signature there instead. The video itself is about the complex analysis used to fill in that missing middle, based on a paper ~20 years ago.

      [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Print_Gallery_(M._C._Escher)

      • rcxdude 47 minutes ago
        I think the gap also has a compositional purpose: the viewer's eye is meant to travel around the image in a circle, and the gap helps anchor that in a way that the filled-in version might not.
    • pdpi 57 minutes ago
      The punchline is that you can fill in the centre of Escher's piece by using complex analysis, and it produces a very satisfying, "obviously correct", solution.

      But, as with all jokes, the punchline isn't funny at all without the setup.

    • rcxdude 44 minutes ago
      The image is essentially a self-similar 'droste-effect' image in disguise. The warping of that image shifts that self- similarity into a visual loop, but the warped image still has a droste-style self-similarity in the center as well.
    • yread 1 hour ago
      The print gallery is just Aw^c in the complex plane
    • oulipo2 1 hour ago
      The whole point is the explanation... it's a bit like someone telling you to take a 2 week holidays somewhere and you'd just say: it's too long, can't someone just get me a plane ticket there and back the same day so I can compress the stay?
  • amelius 1 hour ago
    Clickbait title broke my brain.
  • coldpie 1 hour ago
    Clickbait title could use another pass. What is this about?
    • jgwil2 34 minutes ago
      This was the title used when I came across the video. Apparently YouTube uses many different titles for A/B testing but this is the one I got. Can't edit it now, unfortunately.
    • wodenokoto 1 hour ago
      It makes more sense when seen on YouTube where you get the thumbnail of one of M. C. Eschers famous drawings is shown.

      It’s a drawing of a guy looking at a picture of a town with himself standing in the town, but it’s all twirled and twisted so it’s self repetition isn’t obvious.

    • nticompass 1 hour ago
      I clicked on the link and the video title is "Decoding Escher's most mind-bending piece", which is a lot better. I also had no idea what "3B1B video" meant, apparently it's a channel called "3Blue1Brown".
    • hnuser123456 1 hour ago
      It's about examining the mathematical methods MC Escher used in one of his recursive drawings.
      • rcxdude 42 minutes ago
        Probably he didn't use these techniques explicity: the video mentions but doesn't emphasise that he probably sketched out the map by feel instead of analytically, which is probably one reason why he didn't fill in the center.
      • coldpie 1 hour ago
        > Examining the mathematical methods MC Escher used in one of his recursive drawings

        This would be an excellent title :)

        • SirMaster 1 hour ago
          Depends how you define excellent. If the goal is to get more views then it's not all that great, and views are kind of the point of YouTube for many, especially if they are trying to make a living from it.
          • c-hendricks 1 hour ago
            That's great for YouTube, but HN has some guidelines:

            > please use the original title, unless it is misleading or linkbait