Yanny or Laurel?

Which do you hear? I hear yanny. Cannot hear laurel. At. all. https://www.cnet.com/news/yanny-laurel-audio-hearing-science-behind-why/

I also thought that dress a few years ago was blue and black, not white and gold.

I heard Yammi.

I saw this on the local morning news. I first heard Yanny, then as it continued to play, heard Laurel.

I hear Laurel; no Yanny here. Amazing how unambiguous what one hears is. I saw the dress as black and blue.

I only hear Yanny.

https://www.cnet.com/news/move-over-the-dress-the-internet-has-a-new-illusion-to-fight-over-yanny-or-laurel/
Scroll down to the third recording and listen. As he adjusts the pitch, it goes from Laurel to Yanny.

Laurel. Cannot figure out how it could possibly sound like Yanni.

And cannot imagine it sounding like Laurel. Though the link from @patsmom’s post explains it- and I can hear both there, with the different pitches. Without the pitch change- its yanny.

After you listen to it first and hear Laurel, try listening to music for 4-5 minutes and then play it again. I got Yanny the second time but as the word was repeated it turned back into Laurel.

Weird!

Is there a male/female divide in what is heard? I’m male and I hear Yammi, with an m.

Totally Laurel.

@patsmom now I can hear Laurel but without the adjustment I’m team yanny

Laurel for me, husband heard ya (something)

Yanni for me (I’m female). Haven’t played around with alternating anything yet.

Funny, i hear Yarri. I wonder what that means…

Yanny

Laurel

Yanny. Don’t hear Laurel at all.

I wonder if there is any relationship between what you hear and whether you can sing? I hear Laurel and I can’t sing at all.

@sylvan8798 I hear Yanni and I can’t sing a note.