On Tuesday,Big Thing Chief: The Stolen Wife TV critic Margaret Lyons tweeted the following photo of a dog named Kimchee that bears a striking resemblance to actress Laura Dern. It was, objectively, the greatest tweet of 2018.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
More than 5,000 retweets and 25,000 likes later, it's safe to assume others agree. Even Dern sees the resemblance!
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
We loved it, we wrote about it, but we couldn't stop thinking about it. Why, exactly, does this dog remind us of a beloved human actress? Is it the silken ears, the partially hidden eyes, or something else we can't quite identify?
It all comes down to the natural human ability to make rapid-fire connections between the unfamiliar and the familiar. Research has shown that at a mere hint of a face, our brains will perceive a visage looking back at us, even when there are none. Everyone has experience with this -- we've all seen the Virgin Mary-on-a-slice-of-toast stories, or thought we saw a face looking back at us from a pile of rumpled clothing.
"What's special about people is we have this amazing capacity to symbolize...and a need to humanize," says Dr. Philip Muskin, professor of psychiatry at Columbia University Medical Center. "We humanize things that aren't human – computers, cars, etc. – and we also like to see in non-humans human qualities."
This naturally reflects the ways in which we interact with animals. We love to anthropomorphize our dogs, to connect their behaviors to human emotion.
Which leads us, as Muskin explains, to the brain -- specifically, to the hippocampus, or "the emotional center of the brain." It helps its owner make rapid survival decisions, assessing our surroundings for safe and unsafe scenarios.
SEE ALSO: Laura Dern confirms this dog looks a lot like Laura Dern"It appears to have access to everything we know," he says. "In some remarkable way it creates a 360-degree vision around us all the time." When we see something -- a plant or an animal, for example -- our brain pulls immediately from our experiences and memories to 1) recognize what's before us and 2) determine how we should react.
And because our brains are built to make these immediate, unconscious connections, we tend to land on the things we know best. We recognize elements of faces we know, even if every element isn't there.
It's like caricature drawings, Muskin says. An artist need only hone in on a few defining features to make a recognizable portrait.
Which brings us back to Dern and Kimchee. We see the blonde coloring, the appearance of a side part, the partially hidden eye and our brains make the natural connection. This, coupled with the prompt to see Dern in this dog's face, makes for a strong, unshakeable perception.
The best recent example of this in viral culture? Muskin ties it all back to the infamous "what color is the dress" meme of 2015. Those who initially saw the dress as white and gold had a challenging time seeing it as anything but.
"Once you’re convinced of it, then it’s hard to break the image," he says.
What can we say? The brain is capable of making wild connections. It sure makes for fun viral stories, though.
Wordle today: The answer and hints for October 31Best fitness tracker deal: Save 20% on Fitbit LuxeHere’s Some Unusually Relevant Trollope for Election NightWei Tchou Takes a Train Ride to CharlottesvilleApple just announced new M3 14Staff Picks: Nathalie Léger, Rebecca Solnit, Henry GreenHow to watch the Apple 10/30 event — expect new MacBooks at 'Scary Fast' live streamDid This Belgian Count Have a Bed Big Enough for 50 People?The SilentThe fishing scandal taking over the internetThe Best and Worst Thing About Windows? They’re Transparent.Apple event October 2023: Every single MacBook Pro, iMac announcedWei Tchou Takes a Train Ride to CharlottesvilleWhat Our Writers Are Reading This MonthI Will Pass Through This: Solace and Inspiration from WritersDoes Your Wine Bottle Need a Short Story on It? (Hint: No)What Midcentury Women Artists Had to Put Up WithThe fishing scandal taking over the internetA Letter from Allen Ginsberg Corrects the Record on LSDConsciousness, Dark Matter, and Other Things We Don’t “Get” How to watch 'Conclave' at home: Release date, streaming deals, and more A NASA rover just exposed something on Mars that eluded orbiters NYT mini crossword answers for April 22, 2025 Today's Hurdle hints and answers for April 18, 2025 How tariffs could affect the influencer economy NYT Connections hints and answers for April 20: Tips to solve 'Connections' #679. MacBook Air M4 deals: Save 6% on 13 Apple iPhone 17 Pro leaks highlight major new design change The best refurbished tech deals of April 2025 Remastered 'Oblivion' is out now: Buy it on Steam, PS5, Xbox Best Amazon deal: Get a $5 Amazon credit when you spend $30 on home essentials NYT Connections hints and answers for April 18: Tips to solve 'Connections' #677. Wordle today: The answer and hints for April 19, 2025 The new Motorola Razr is coming: Leaks, launch date, price Ruggable End of Season Sale deals: up to 20% off sitewide and 40% off select clearance styles GoveeLife smart air quality monitor: 10% off at Amazon Best earbuds deal: Take 20% off the Samsung Galaxy Buds 3 Pro at Amazon Insta360 X5 action camera announcement: Key specs, pricing TikTok food creators are already planning for a recession Best gaming deal: Get a like new PlayStation Portal for 25% off at Amazon
1.8072s , 8225.0625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Big Thing Chief: The Stolen Wife】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network