At the end of last month, a Twitter user uploaded a photo he took with his iPhone, and he didn't expect to overturn the car.

From the two images he uploaded, the first photo showed that the face was partially covered with leaves, and the second picture showed the photo information, which showed that it was taken by the iPhone 13Pro.
The user tweeted: "I took a picture of a group of people outside today. My iPhone replaced a woman's head with a leaf. The rest of the photos are nice. No weird settings. I've never seen this before. ”
After the incident, it also attracted a large number of netizens to come and watch. Some people questioned in the comment area whether the leaves fell and just blocked the face?
The blogger also responded in the comments section that he didn't think so. Because it is obvious that there are smear marks in the hair around the face, not simply blocked by the leaves, but more like the leaves on the face.
The blogger also said that he has taken about 47,000 iPhone photos since 2007, which has never happened.
Subsequently, some people in the comment area made a more reasonable speculation about this, believing that there was a problem with the iPhone's camera algorithm. Now the mainstream mobile phone cameras will take dozens of photos the moment we press the shutter, and then synthesize one. Apple's technology, called Deep Fusion, has been used since the iPhone 11.
Apple's specific approach is this, the camera first takes 4 photos of short exposure, then a normal standard exposure of 4 photos, and finally a long exposure to obtain dark details, and then automatically analyze these nine photos, select the most analytical part of which is composited.
So, the most likely scenario is that the moment the man pressed the shutter, the iPhone's camera took 9 frames of photos, including a period of movement in which the leaves fell, and later when synthesizing multi-frame photos, the camera algorithm mistakenly mixed the face and the leaves into one, which eventually led to such a farce.
Although the iPhone's camera is known for its realism, it actually uses AI algorithms. Similar algorithms roll over, and there is more than that.
For example, in the comment area, some people posted the same situation they encountered, and most of the characters were integrated by the background environment.
For example, someone posted a wine bottle photographed by his iPhone XS, and it also overturned on the background bokeh, and the edges were smeared with deformation.
What do you think about that? Has your iPhone ever experienced a similar situation?