| Your eyes can play tricks on you. Optical Illusions
Pictures that confuse your eyes and brain, tricking them into
seeing something differently, are called optical illusions. See
if you can figure out these optical illusions.
1. Blivet

A blivet, also known as a poiuyt, is an undecipherable figure,
an optical illusion and an impossible object. It appears to have
three cylindrical prongs at one end which then mysteriously transform
into two rectangular prongs at the other end.
2. Bezold Effect

The Bezold Effect is an optical illusion, named after a German
professor of meteorology, Wilhelm von Bezold (1837-1907), who
discovered that a color may appear different depending on its
relation to adjacent colors. In the above example, the red seems
lighter combined with the white, and darker combined with the
black.
3. Café Wall Illusion

The café wall illusion is an optical illusion, first described
by Doctor Richard Gregory. He observed this curious effect in
the tiles of the wall of a café at the bottom of St Michael’s
Hill, Bristol. This optical illusion makes the parallel straight
horizontal lines appear to be bent. To construct the illusion,
alternating light and dark “bricks” are laid in staggered
rows. It is essential for the illusion that each “brick”
is surrounded by a layer of “mortar” (the grey in
the image). This should ideally be of a color in between the dark
and light color of the “bricks”.
4. The Chubb Illusion

The Chubb illusion is an optical illusion wherein the apparent
contrast of an object varies dramatically, depending on the context
of the presentation. Low-contrast texture surrounded by a uniform
field appears to have higher contrast than when it is surrounded
by high-contrast texture. This was observed and documented by
Chubb and colleagues in 1989.
5. Ebbinghaus Illusion

The Ebbinghaus illusion is an optical illusion of relative size
perception. In the best-known version of the illusion, two circles
of identical size are placed near to each other and one is surrounded
by large circles while the other is surrounded by small circles;
the first central circle then appears smaller than the second
central circle.
6. Fraser Spiral Illusion

The illusion is also known as the false spiral, or by its original
name, the twisted cord illusion. The overlapping black arc segments
appear to form a spiral; however, the arcs are a series of concentric
circles.
7. Hermann Grid Illusion

The Hermann grid illusion is an optical illusion reported by
Ludimar Hermann in 1870 while, incidentally, reading John Tyndall’s
Sound. The illusion is characterised by “ghostlike”
grey blobs perceived at the intersections of a white (or light-colored)
grid on a black background. The grey blobs disappear when looking
directly at an intersection.
8. Hering Illusion

The Hering illusion is an optical illusion discovered by the
German physiologist Ewald Hering in 1861. The two vertical lines
are both straight, but they look as if they were bowed outwards.
The distortion is produced by the lined pattern on the background,
that simulates a perspective design, and creates a false impression
of depth.
9. Impossible Cube Illusion

The impossible cube or irrational cube is an impossible object
that draws upon the ambiguity present in a Necker cube illustration.
An impossible cube is usually rendered as a Necker cube in which
the edges are apparently solid beams. This apparent solidity gives
the impossible cube greater visual ambiguity than the Necker cube,
which is less likely to be perceived as an impossible object.
The illusion plays on the human eye’s interpretation of
two-dimensional pictures as three-dimensional objects.
10. Isometric Illusion

An isometric illusion (also called an ambiguous figure or inside/outside
illusion) is a type of optical illusion, specifically one due
to multistable perception. In the image above, the shape can be
perceived as either an inside or an outside corner.
11. Jastrow Illusion

The Jastrow illusion is an optical illusion discovered by the
American psychologist Joseph Jastrow in 1889. In this illustration,
the two figures are identical, although the lower one appears
to be larger.
12. Kanizsa Triangle

The Kanizsa triangle is an optical illusion first described by
the Italian psychologist Gaetano Kanizsa in 1955. In the image
above, a white equilateral triangle is perceived, but in fact
none is drawn.
13. Lilac Chaser

Lilac chaser is a visual illusion, also known as the Pac-Man
illusion. It consists of 12 lilac (or pink or magenta-like), blurred
disks arranged in a circle (like the numbers on a clock), around
a small, black, central cross on a grey background. One of the
disks disappears briefly (for about 0.1 second), then the next
(about 0.125 second later), and the next, and so on, in a clockwise
direction. When one stares at the cross for about 20 seconds or
so, one first sees a gap running around the circle of lilac disks,
then a green disk running around the circle of lilac disks, then
a green disk running around on the grey background, the lilac
disks appearing to have disappeared or to have been erased by
the green disk.
14. Motion Illusion

One type of motion illusion is a type of optical illusion in
which a static image appears to be moving due to the cognitive
effects of interacting color contrasts and shape position. To
properly view this effect, click the image above to see the full
sized version.
15. Necker Cube

The Necker cube is an ambiguous line drawing. It is a wire-frame
drawing of a cube in isometric perspective, which means that parallel
edges of the cube are drawn as parallel lines in the picture.
When two lines cross, the picture does not show which is in front
and which is behind. This makes the picture ambiguous; it can
be interpreted two different ways. When a person stares at the
picture, it will often seem to flip back and forth between the
two valid interpretations (so-called multistable perception).
16. Orbison Illusion

The Orbison illusion is an optical illusion that was first described
by the psychologist William Orbison in 1939. The bounding rectangle
and inner square both appear distorted in the presence of the
radiating lines. The background gives us the impression there
is some sort of perspective. As a result, our brain sees the shape
distorted. This is a variant of the Hering and Wundt illusions.
17. Poggendorff Illusion

The Poggendorff Illusion is an optical illusion that involves
the brain’s perception of the interaction between diagonal
lines and horizontal and vertical edges. It is named after Johann
Poggendorff (1796-1877), a German physicist who first described
it in 1860. In the image above, a straight black and red line
is obscured by a grey rectangle. The blue line appears, instead
of the red line, to be the same as the black one, which is clearly
shown not to be the case in the second picture.
18. Adelson’s Checker Shadow Illusion

The image shows what appears to be a black and white checker-board
with a green cylinder resting on it that casts a shadow diagonally
across the middle of the board. The black and white squares are
actually different shades of gray. The image has been constructed
so that “white” squares in the shadow, one of which
is labeled “B,” are actually the exact same gray value
as “black” squares outside the shadow, one of which
is labeled “A.” The two squares A and B appear very
different as a result of the illusion.
19. White Illusion

White’s illusion is an optical illusion illustrating the
fact that the same target luminance can elicit different perceptions
of brightness in different contexts. Note, that although the gray
rectangles are all of equal luminance, the ones seen in the context
with the dark stripes appear brighter than the ones seen in the
context with the bright stripes. Note that this effect is opposite
to what would be expected from a simple physiological explanation
on the basis of simultaneous contrast (in that case the rectangles
sharing the long borders with the dark stripes should appear brighter).
20. Zöllner Illusion

In this figure the black lines seem to be unparallel, but in
reality they are parallel. The shorter lines are on an angle to
the longer lines. This angle helps to create the impression that
one end of the longer lines is nearer to us than the other end.
This is very similar to the way the Wundt illusion appears. It
may be that the Zöllner illusion is caused by this impression
of depth.
21. Moving Balls Illusion

Those balls like structure in this image appears to move in left
direction.Watch constantly for some time and you will see it moving.The
image is not animated.
22. Space Warper

The image itself is not the illusion, but the fact that you can
transfer it is. Stare at the center of the spiral for about a
minute. Then immediately look at the back of your hand. It will
appear to be twitching and moving.
23. Moving Circles

This image is not animated (it is a jpg, not a gif) but the circles
appear to move as you examine the picture. The little red markers
are there to show you that the circles are not moving. |