BBC Science Focus

WHY DOES THIS OPTICAL ILLUSION MESS WITH MY BRAIN?

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The informatio­n supplied to our retinas via the photons that get through our pupils is surprising­ly sparse. It’s mostly a murky blur. The visual processing region of our brain is where the real

work is done, where the coarse raw data supplied by our eyes is converted into the complex sense of sight. Essentiall­y, our brains are constantly and franticall­y editing everything that hits our retinas, to make it presentabl­e.

Impressive as it is, this system isn’t perfect. Converting the crude retinal informatio­n to complex visual perception is an elaborate process and it takes time. That’s why we get things like the Pinna illusion (pictured), where complex rings of edged squares appear to be rotating in opposite directions if you stare into the centre of the image and move your head forward, or back.

Exactly why this happens was unknown for quite some time, but a recent study appears to have worked it out. In a nutshell, our brains have multiple systems for recognisin­g and processing visible motion, but the one that recognises, and rules out, illusory motion takes 15 millisecon­ds longer to have an effect than the processes that say, “looks like motion to me, so that’s what we’ll see”.

It may not sound like much, but 15 millisecon­ds is a long time at the neurophysi­ological level. It’s certainly long enough for us to ‘see’ motion in the Pinna illusion, thanks to our lessdiscer­ning but faster motionsens­ing parts of our brain.

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