The word “trypophobia” was trending on Twitter after Apple Inc. AAPL introduced its new iPhone 11 Pro, giving millions an opportunity to learn a new word, and leaving sufferers pleading that their unusual fear is a real problem.
Trypophobia is a fear of small holes, particularly clustered together.
That’s a no for me #iPhone11 #trypophobia pic.twitter.com/uHIlLF5OoP
— Jake B (@JE_Baggins) September 10, 2019
The new iPhone 11 Pro has three cameras clustered together in one corner of the back of the phone. People with this fear of small holes really didn't like it.
All I can think when I look at the new iPhone is #Trypophobia pic.twitter.com/DCheS6jvJ4
— Rose (@Roze_) September 10, 2019
For some on Twitter, it raised fears of something popping out of one of the camera holes. Or crawling out of it. But lots of things with holes — honeycombs, pancakes, coral, the eyes of certain insects — seem to make trypophobes squeamish, according to people who have the condition, and people who study it.
"It's something you don't see in the natural world -- except in poisonous animals," Geoff Cole, a visual scientist at the University of Essex in England, told CNN.
Actually you do see it in nature.
Science explains why this picture of a sprouting strawberry disgusts some people #trypophobia https://t.co/C0qDY9gDFX pic.twitter.com/OnglO8XniR
— Insider (@thisisinsider) June 9, 2017
And now some see it on the iPhone, too.
Related Links:
Apple Shows Off New iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro
What We Learned From Apple's Event: Arcade, TV+, iPad, Watch Series 5 And iPhone 11
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Comments
Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.