Optical Illusion

This picture of optical illusion is based on colour. It is meant to affect your mind and your senses.
Red means go. As colours go, red is always the first to catch the eye. Thats why it sits at the top of the rainbow. Red looks fast. And thats why you are sitting in your red sports car.
It is also true that yellow makes objects look larger the perfect colour for warning signs. Black objects look smaller. Black is the absence of colour; it absorbs light. With less light, you get the illusion of less size.
Why you see what you see?
There are two main reasons why colours can trick your eyes: the way vision works and the way light works. Your eyes send information to the brain, which adapts to make sense of whatever it sees no matter how strange. And then theres light. Without light, there is no colour. When you say something has colour, it means a reflection of the light falling on it. Change the light and you change the colour.
Everything that you see is a kind of illusion. You think you see one thing, but you are actually seeing a number of things all at once a random assortment of different colours and levels of brightness. But your mind tricks you into organizing those things into groups.. whether they belong there or not.
These are pictures of optical illusions compiled into different videos. No one has the same brain youve got. No one else has seen everything you have seen. Perception involves interaction. Watch the videos, look at each picture, interact with it and turn it over in your mind. Sometimes seeing is believing, sometimes it is not.

An optical illusion characterized by visually perceived images that, at least in common sense terms, are deceptive or misleading. so the information gathered by the eye is processed by the brain to give, on the face of it, a percept that does not tally with a physical measurement of the stimulus source. A conventional assumption is that there are physiological illusions that occur naturally and cognitive illusions that can be demonstrated by specific visual tricks that say something more basic about how human perceptual systems work.

Physiological illusions, such as the afterimages following bright lights or adapting stimuli of excessively longer alternating patterns (contingent perceptual aftereffect), are presumed to be the effects on the eyes or brain of excessive stimulation of a specific type - brightness, tilt, color, movement, and so on. The theory is that stimuli have individual dedicated neural paths in the early stages of visual processing, and that repetitive stimulation of only one or a few channels causes a physiological imbalance that alters perception.


Read and Learn more about Optical Illusion
- Amazing Optical Illusion
- Optical Illusions
- Illusions
- Pictures of Optical Illusion - Physiological Illusion


Illusion In Your Environment
At the meat store, the red meat is surrounded by green decorations. The green makes the red look more red, so the meat looks fresher. When you take the meat home, it may not look as good. You have experienced the afterimage effect. Grocery stores are full of colour illusions. Carrots look more orange when theres green or blue on the bags. Potatoes inside purple-tinted sacks seem more yellow, and better looking. A blue background helps oranges readily live up to their name. These are all examples of the afterimage effect. By controlling what your eyes see, the grocer helps you fill your shopping cart!


Relax and concentrate looking at the centre of the picture for at least 30s. Close your eyes, you can see the image of Jesus.

These are pictures of optical illusions compiled into different videos. No one has the same brain you’ve got. No one else has seen everything you have seen. Perception involves interaction. Watch the videos, look at each picture, interact with it and turn it over in your mind. Sometimes seeing is believing, sometimes it is not.
Optical Illusion (Stuck On You)
Show Me The Way
One More Try
???? (???)
??? - ????
Morning Has Broken (Optical Illusion)
Let It Be






















