Let Optical Illusions Deceive Your Eyes!
You thought you could trust your eyes? Or that what you saw was never wrong? Well thing again! Optical illusions can deceive your eyes, no matter how good your eyes are.
An optical illusion is a visually perceived image, characterized by their misleading and deceptive nature. The trick that lies behind optical illusions is that the images that our brain interprets from them, does not tally with their physical measurements.
Basically, there are two types of illusions: Physiological and Cognitive. But there are a few of them which make the eye feel like there is no illusion at all!
Physiological Illusions
Physiological illusions are those illusions produced as a result of excessive stimulation of a specific type, like depth, color and movement.

For example, in the above picture, the two blocks, A and B appear to have different colors. But they actually are of the same color. When they are joined with using the color, this can be clearly understood, as in the picture shown below.

Even the afterimages that we see after sudden flashes of bright light can be classified as physiological illusions.
Cognitive Illusions
Those illusions which arise due to the conflict between the interpretation of the stimulus and our true knowledge are cognitive illusions. In simple words, these stimuli appear to be illusions because we understand that what we are seeing is incorrect.
Cognitive illusions are further divided into four types:
Ambiguous:
Ambiguous illusions are formed due to the mutual existence of two or more figures in the same stimulus.
A famous example of an ambiguous illusion is the Rubin Vase shown below. Note how the vase becomes more prominent than the two faces, when the colors are swapped.

Distorting:
These are those illusions which appear to be what they are not, due to distracting factors like color and size. For example, in the Muller-Layer Effect image below, the lower line appears to be longer than the upper one.

Paradox:
Paradox illusions are generated by stimuli that clearly show us the impossible, by means of supporting features. Such an illusion is seen in M. C. Escher’s painting, Waterfall shown below, where the water is shown as flowing through a passage, that is practically impossible to be constructed. Note that the image would appear quite normal if the supporting features, of the towers, were removed.

Fictional:
These are illusions that do not actually exist for everybody. That is, one and only one observer amongst a crowd of many may be able to see the illusion. Commonly, fictional illusions are called hallucinations.
Common examples are those illusions experienced by patients of Parkinson’s disease or Lewy Body Dementia.
Liked it
Great article!!!
Fictional illusions are called hallucination..(.hmnn…) I wonder, writers love to write fictional novels… so that means they’re always hallucinating; and hallucination is one of the symtoms of mild schezophrenia. So, writers are prone into something? Just a thought!!!(LOL)
In total, great job. Nice article. Informative.
Great article. I had fun with them.
Yes, fun items!
Cool, Illusions are so weird, good article,
Koyin
Thanks for a great article!
Nice job.
Fantastic! This was a good read, thank you!
THAT WAS CCCCCCCCRRRRRRRRRRAAAAAAAAAAPPPPPPPPP!
Great article mate! I’ve seen the A & B squares one before, but I never saw the picture where they prove that they are the same colours. That is the most intense once I’ve ever seen! :O Good job finding these
And if you find other great ones, you know how to contact me
dude my head hurts o.o [vasay] great article tho
awsome!
dude im a girl i think.
wtf wheres the rap!!
Nice! http://www.google.com
I am disillusioned!
Optical illusions have always fascinated me. Good article.
I liked this but I still dont believe those two blocks are the same color!
I loved this! I’m doing a report on optical illusions, and alot of the stuff I have found so far has been way to confusing, but this made it alot clearer! Thanks!
What about literal illusions?
it is nice
My dad has always had a framed copy of MC Escher’s Paradox hanging up in his office… at one point he even had a daily planner featuring MC Escher art which he gave to me as a child after he’d used it all up… I still have it!
This is fascinating stuff!
Take heart,
EEG










