
Tricks the Brain Plays Human Mind
Likes to Present a Consistent Picture
All Things
Considered audio
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An illusion clues researchers into how the
brain works. Credit: Daw-An Wu, California Institute of
Technology
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 | May 19, 2004 -- Scientists at the
California Institute of Technology have developed a visual illusion that they
believe will help explain how human brains make sense of the world. The computer
simulation shows how various parts of the brain act together to make a coherent
visual image.
NPR's
Joe Palca talks with NPR's Michele
Norris, host of All Things
Considered, about the research, which appears in the current issue of
Nature.
Do the Illusion
Step 1: Click on the "Illusion Animation" link in the
sidebar on the left.
Sit so your eyes are about 8 inches from the screen. Look at the
center of the animation and pay careful attention to the direction the red dots
appear to moving.
Step 2: Still sitting with your eyes about 8 inches from
the animation, now look at a point about 1 inch from the left hand edge of the
screen and note which direction the red dots are now moving.
What You Should See: In step 1, all the red dots in the
entire animation appear to be moving up, and the green dots appear to be moving
down. In reality, the screen is broken into three columns. In the center column,
the red dots are indeed moving down, and the green dots up. But in the other two
columns, to the left and right of center, the direction of the dots is
reversed.
The Illusion Explained: What's happening is an example of a
"binding problem" in the brain. Typically, color and movement are thought to be
processed by different parts of the brain. But a red ball rolling across a table
looks like a red ball rolling across a table because the brain puts the movement
and color information together to form a coherent perception.
The brain is trying to do that in this illusion; it's incorrectly
binding color and motion so it can tell us that all the red dots are moving in
the same direction throughout our "world," in this case the animation display.
The illusion breaks down if you stand several feet away from the monitor, and
watch the illusion (a long mouse cable or a friend is necessary to do
this.)
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Web Resources
?Shimojo Psychophysics Laboratory
at CalTech
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