Nobody can agree if this robot says 'Yanny' or 'Laurel' and everyone is arguing about it
- Nobody can tell if this recording says "Yanny" or "Laurel."
- Turns out, both sides are correct. Here's the science.
Workplaces everywhere ground to a halt on Tuesday as everybody argued whether the robot in this recording says "Yanny" or "Laurel."
To cut right to the chase, here's the recording, as shared on Twitter by influencer and designer Cloe Feldman. The recording apparently originated on Reddit.
What do you hear?! Yanny or Laurel pic.twitter.com/jvHhCbMc8I
— Cloe Feldman (@CloeCouture) May 15, 2018
Some Twitter users have said they hear "Yanny" and some say they hear "Laurel."
It’s LAUREL how are you people hearing Yanny? It’s clear as day lmao
— Tyler Marton (@TylerMarton) May 15, 2018
This 100% says yanny and if you tell me you hear laurel, I don’t trust you https://t.co/6WBcJh9fde
— bri (@brianaventrella) May 15, 2018
Apparently, both sides are correct, according to findings from some Reddit users.
They speculate that there are two separate voices in the recording, one saying "Laurel" at a lower frequency and the other saying "Yanny" at a higher frequency. If you play the recording at a frequency with more bass, you're probably more likely to hear "Laurel," while if the there is less bass, you'll hear "Yanny."
The two words mesh well enough to be combined into one recording. The human brain can't process both at once, though, so it picks one to process, depending on your hearing range.
A very helpful Twitter user adjusted the pitch of the recording to show this. "Yanny" can clearly be heard when the pitch is lowered, and "Laurel" can be heard when the pitch is raised.
Ok, so if you pitch-shift it you can hear different things:
— Steve Pomeroy (@xxv) May 15, 2018
down 30%: https://t.co/F5WCUZQJlq
down 20%: https://t.co/CLhY5tvnC1
up 20%: https://t.co/zAc7HomuCS
up 30% https://t.co/JdNUILOvFW
up 40% https://t.co/8VTkjXo3L1 https://t.co/suSw6AmLtn
YouTube channel Nerd It Up dissected the recording as well, concluding that which word you hear depends on the pitch of the recording.
To sum it up, different people hear sounds in different pitches, which is why the Internet couldn't decide on which word, "Yanny" or "Laurel," the recording was saying.
This isn't the first time a conundrum like this has taken the internet by storm. People were left befuddled by the infamous dress incident of 2015 in which no one could decide if a dress in the photo was white and gold or black and blue. The similarites did not escape Twitter users.
Between the blue/white dress and Laurel/Yanny I am questioning everything. Like what if we all hear and see more things differently and we don’t know it yet 🤯
— Dylan Metcalfe (@DWMetcalfe) May 15, 2018
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Contributer : Tech Insider https://ift.tt/2rMhAvc
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