What these images really are
They typically show an ambiguous picture (for example: faces, animals, landscapes, or abstract shapes) and ask what you notice first. The idea is:
- “If you saw X first, you’re type A”
- “If you saw Y first, you’re type B”
The truth behind it
These tests are not scientifically validated personality assessments. What you notice first is influenced by things like:
- visual contrast and brightness
- shape familiarity (your brain spots known patterns quickly)
- viewing angle or device screen
- attention bias in that moment
So two people with the same personality can see completely different things first—and the same person may see different things at different times.
Why people enjoy them
Even though they’re not accurate psychology tools, they’re popular because:
- they feel personal
- they’re fun and interactive
- they create curiosity and conversation
Real personality testing vs viral images
Scientifically used models (like Big Five personality traits) rely on:
- structured questionnaires
- consistent behavioral patterns
- statistical validation
Not single-image interpretations.
If you want, you can upload the image you saw and tell me what you noticed first—I can explain what the illusion is actually designed to show (visually, not psychologically).

