This post solves an illusion/riddle named Spinning Lady, doing rounds on the Internet and demonstrates how to get rid of the illusion.

If you closely look the at the animation (click on the image), some will see the silhouette rotating in clockwise direction, others will see it rotating in the anti-clockwise direction. Most, I have heard will see the clockwise rotation. We should be able to switch between these rotations by focusing on the shadow of the legs and imaging the rotation in a direction opposite to what we see.
Anurag Sinha identifies a feature that is also responsible for the illusion. I am here to hammer the last nail on the illusion's coffin. One thing you will notice when the silhouette appears to have changed the direction is the change of not only the grounded foot but also the floating hand. Left hand appears to float when the rotation is anti-clockwise and a right hand appears to float when the rotation is clockwise.
How can this happen? I mean when is our left hand our right hand? The notion of left and right and hence the notion of clockwise and anti-clockwise are based on our ability to distinguish front and back! If we watch a clock without a dial, from behind we will see it moving in an anti-clockwise direction. Thus, if we have no way of distinguishing the front and the back, we have no way of deciding whether the motion is in clockwise or anti-clockwise direction. If the cues are confusing, we end up in an illusion; some thinking in one way and other in another way.
There appear to be two points of confusion here: One is the foot that is grounded, other is in the floating hand! Look at these snapshots:
In the snapshot above left foot is on the ground right hand is floating
In the snapshot above right foot is on the ground left hand is floating
I drew eyes on the face of the silhouette (also boobs). Now we can distinguish between the front and back of the silhouette! Can`t we?
Thus, the illusion is created not only by the ambiguity in resting feet judgement but by also the total lack of cues to distinguish between the front and back of the silhouette. We should note that we can see front and back for certain range of angles but these are not the distinguishing part of the rotations. Thus, If we can introduce cues to tell the difference we can stop the illusion.
Further, I argue that this illusion is an accident; an accidental creation when an avatar rotating in "no one knows what direction" was converted to a silhouette (Only the author can tell and most importantly it does not matter!).
I did an experiment with this illusion. I added cues to distinguish front and back of the silhouette by drawing boobs and eyes to make it rotate in an anti-clockwise direction. I also had to add depth cues to the feet to disambiguate anchoring.
Now click and watch the edited animation. (It is not polished yet). Can you see it rotating in both directions? NO? You can only see it rotate in an anti-clockwise direction. Even if you can switch, my edits force you back to think anti-clockwise rotation. We can edit the animation to make it rotate in the clockwise direction too.
In the snapshot above right foot is on the ground left hand is floating
I drew eyes on the face of the silhouette (also boobs). Now we can distinguish between the front and back of the silhouette! Can`t we?
Thus, the illusion is created not only by the ambiguity in resting feet judgement but by also the total lack of cues to distinguish between the front and back of the silhouette. We should note that we can see front and back for certain range of angles but these are not the distinguishing part of the rotations. Thus, If we can introduce cues to tell the difference we can stop the illusion.
Further, I argue that this illusion is an accident; an accidental creation when an avatar rotating in "no one knows what direction" was converted to a silhouette (Only the author can tell and most importantly it does not matter!).
I did an experiment with this illusion. I added cues to distinguish front and back of the silhouette by drawing boobs and eyes to make it rotate in an anti-clockwise direction. I also had to add depth cues to the feet to disambiguate anchoring.
Now click and watch the edited animation. (It is not polished yet). Can you see it rotating in both directions? NO? You can only see it rotate in an anti-clockwise direction. Even if you can switch, my edits force you back to think anti-clockwise rotation. We can edit the animation to make it rotate in the clockwise direction too.
Thus, I have shown that the perception of rotation of this silhouette depends both on the depth cues and the cues to distinguish the front and back of rotating objects.
And yes, this is not a right or left brain test. Real left and right brain tests are elsewhere. (click)
And yes, this is not a right or left brain test. Real left and right brain tests are elsewhere. (click)
Postscript:
This was created by Japanese designer Nobuyuki Kayahara. This is a Bistable illusion caused by lack of visual cues for depth.