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Jul 11, 2010 · A dumbfounding study roughly a decade ago that many now find hard to believe revealed that if people are asked to focus on a video of other people passing basketballs, about half of watchers...
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Apr 19, 2011 · It's the bizarre video that has attracted more than 1.8 million hits on YouTube. Unsuspecting viewers are invited to count how many times basketball players pass the ball to each other.
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- Daily Mail Reporter
Apr 19, 2011 · The video, posted on YouTube in various forms for years, has registered millions of hits -- and the psychologists who devised the test, led by Daniel Simons of the University of Illinois, reported that half the people they tested were so focused on the ballplayers that they actually missed the gorilla.
Mar 25, 2016 · When I first saw the video of people playing basketball, I counted each pass — and missed the obvious. You?
Daniel Simons. For more than a decade, my colleagues and I have been studying a form of invisibility known as inattentional blindness. In our best-known demonstration, we showed people a video...
Jul 12, 2010 · In the new i-Perception paper, Simons (this time without Chabris) updates the famous gorilla experiment. The new video also features students divided into two teams, passing basketballs.
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Apr 19, 2011 · The study asked 197 students aged 18 to 35 to watch a video where a group of people are passing a basketball to each other. The students are asked to count how many passes are exchanged between the players wearing white T-shirts.