Slide Shows | Mind & Brain

Illusions: The Eyes Have It

Eye gaze is critically important to humans, as social primates. Maybe that's why illusions involving eyes are so compelling.

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About 50 years ago Russian psychologist Alfred L. Yarbus tracked the eye movements of volunteers as they viewed photographs of human faces, and found that the eyes of the portraits were a primary area of interest for most observers....[More]

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Not knowing where a person is looking makes us uneasy. For this reason, it can be awkward to converse with somebody with dark sunglasses. And it's why someone might wear dark sunglasses to look "mysterious." A recently identified visual illusion takes advantage of the unsettling effect of uncertainty in gaze direction....[More]

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In another example of a hybrid image (see previous slide), this ghostly face appears to look to the left when you sit in front of your computer screen....[More]

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The Ghostly Gaze illusion is based on the hybrid image technology created by Aude Oliva and Phillippe Schyns at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology....[More]

SEEING DOUBLE?
thumb: SEEING DOUBLE?

SEEING DOUBLE?

But what if you double up the features of a portrait in without overlapping them completely? It's relatively easy to create images in Photoshop in which the eyes and the mouth, but no other facial features, have been doubled....[More]

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The perceived direction of gaze is also influenced by contextual cues, such as the position of the face and the head. This illusion was described in 1824 by British chemist and natural philosopher William Hyde Wollaston (who also discovered the elements palladium and rhodium)....[More]

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Have you ever visited an art museum and noticed that the portraits seem to follow you with their eyes? Such eye tracking is not only a B-movie horror flick cliché, but also a powerful illusion that continues to inspire visual science studies....[More]

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A fascination with eyes is not solely a human trait. Many species of fish, insects, and even birds sport false (one could say illusory) eyes on their wings, stalks, and yes, even the backs of their heads....[More]

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7 Comments

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  1. 1. chuck 06:41 PM 8/26/08

    Just curious, but what if the photo had included cleavage ?

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  2. 2. warrendsmith 04:07 PM 8/27/08

    I allegedly have "Asperger's syndrome," an autism-like mental state. Anyhow, I was unable to see all your eye-based optical illusions, or if I did they were very weak and unimpressive. But I have no trouble being impressed by all kinds of other interesting optical illusions elsewhere.

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  3. 3. vinod 05:52 PM 8/27/08

    I took a picture of this hybrid image on my iphone. The camera roll or the thumb nail images show marilyn monroe whereas when you make the image bigger it turns up as Einstein. I guess that is another way to see this illusion.
    -Vinod

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  4. 4. Nathaniel 12:16 AM 8/28/08

    Because of limited space in my computer room, I'm unable to step far enough away from the image to create the illusion. However, I've got a plugin for firefox that allows me to resize images and as vinod pointed out, resizing the image has the same effect as changing your distance from it. This is likely due to the fact that the detail is lost when the images is shrunk and only the course detail remains.

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  5. 5. myopia 04:35 PM 8/28/08

    I found I had to take off my eyeglasses (for myopia) in order to see the illusions without having to back out of the room. They are fantastic when I am not wearing my corrective lenses.

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  6. 6. rcdohare 02:38 AM 8/29/08

    the presentation should be in pps formate.

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  7. 7. GregorS 01:04 PM 12/30/09

    Many web browsers (like Firefox that I am using now but also I.E. & Chrome...) have a zoom function (often the scroll wheel, sometimes with Ctrl pressed) Which allow you to sit comfortably in front of your screen while you zoom the illusion images in and out - who wants to have to gt up out of their chairs anyway!

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