If you’ve ever been to a magic show, you know how easy it is to be fooled. But the same thing can happen when you’re looking at a screen—no tricks required.
The subreddit ‘Confusing Perspective’ is built entirely around that idea. Its members share photos that make real life seem quite strange.
Whether it’s perfect timing or an oddly placed angle, these images don’t always make sense right away, so give them a second and see if you can “solve” them.
It’s a fun way to check how quickly your brain jumps to the wrong conclusion—and finds its way back.
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This Photo Is Directly Above The Zebras. The Black Ones Are Shadows
Schrodinger's Cat
Illusions have a long history, dating back to ancient Greece.
In 350BC, Aristotle noted that “our senses can be trusted, but they can be easily fooled”.
He noticed that if you watch a waterfall and shift your gaze to static rocks, the rocks appear to move in the opposite direction of the water's flow, an effect we now call the “motion aftereffect” or the waterfall illusion.
Tracking the flow of the water seems to “wear out” certain neurons in the brain as they adapt to the motion. When you shift your gaze to the rocks, other competing neurons overcompensate, creating the illusion of movement in the opposite direction.
This Baby Polar Bear’s Face Looks Like It Was Photoshopped To It’s Mother’s Side
Dave Is A Big Baby
Camouflage Tram !!!
But the real boom in the study of illusions began in the 19th Century. A school of scientists who studied perception, among many other things, created simple illusions to shed light on how the brain perceives patterns and shapes, which kick-started the early theories on how our eyes can play tricks on our minds.
The Ebbinghaus illusion, for example, revealed that our brain makes judgments about size using adjacent objects, and this can be manipulated. (The orange circles in that picture are actually the same size.)
Looks Like Two Separate Photos
Dog With A Pinecone
Nice Outfit. (Does This Count?)
Osaka Expo There Is A Hole In The Sky For This Building
“[Early illusions] were of interest theoretically because they went against the prevailing view that you could understand vision if you understood the way in which an image is formed in the eye,” says illusion historian Nicholas Wade from the University of Dundee in Scotland.
“The phenomena were small but reliable; they were experimentally tractable and it generated this incredible boom of variations on simple figures.”
Yet this period also saw a series of misguided attempts to find a ‘unifying theory’ of illusions. The literature on illusions is “littered with over-interpretations”, Wade adds.
Floating Head (No Dogs Were Harmed For This Pic)
Nice
Sky Is The Same Color As The Building
Today, illusion research is much more advanced. Thanks to modern technology, scientists can actually look inside our brains as we view images like the ones on this list. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), for example, lets researchers see how our neurons respond to specific visual illusions.
Because of this, the way we understand perception has also shifted. For instance, one school of thought suggests that what we see is shaped by the brain’s constant effort to predict what will happen next. The idea is that many illusions exist because we’re always trying to stay one step ahead, compensating for the tiny delay between an event and our awareness of it. In other words, what you think you’re seeing is often your brain’s best guess, not a perfect snapshot of reality.
This River In Latvia Looks Like A Crocodile Crawling Into The Sea
You're Not Witnessing A [crime]
Nobody's Nose?
Nice Angle
“Although our sensations feel accurate and truthful, they do not necessarily reproduce the physical reality of the outside world,” neuroscientists Stephen L. Macknik and Susana Martinez-Conde write.
“Of course, many experiences in daily life reflect the physical stimuli that send signals to the brain. But the same neural machinery that interprets inputs from our eyes, ears and other sensory organs is also responsible for our dreams, delusions and failings of memory. In other words, the real and the imagined share a physical source in the brain.”
So, they recommend taking a lesson from Socrates: “All I know is that I know nothing.”
Caught My Cat Mid-Evolution
That’s One Tall Baby
Man With Tiny Arm
The visual illusion is actually one of the most important tools neuroscientists use to understand how the brain creates its sense of reality.
“Historically, artists as well as illusionists have used illusions to gain insights into the inner workings of the visual system. Long before scientists were studying the properties of neurons, artists had devised a series of techniques to deceive the brain into thinking that a flat canvas was three-dimensional or that a series of brushstrokes was indeed a still life,” Macknik and Martinez-Conde explain.
According to them, visual illusions are defined by the dissociation between the physical reality and the subjective perception of an object or event. “When we experience a visual illusion, we may see something that is not there or fail to see something that is there. Because of this disconnect between perception and reality, visual illusions demonstrate the ways in which the brain can fail to re-create the physical world,” the neuroscientists explain. “By studying these failings, we can learn about the computational methods used by the brain to construct visual experience.”
Brightness, color, shading, eye movement, and other factors can have a very powerful effect on what we “see.”
Cat And Its Shadow
I Was Scared For A Second
Window Balconies Anyone,
Wormhole Window
That Shoulder Tattoo
Grandma's Hair Is On Fire
Carpet At My Work
Giant Blackbird, Or Open Car Hood?
The City Of Giants
Big Seagull
Sky Looks Like A River
Kitchen Countertop Looks Like A Carpet
Old Lady Impaled By Pool Noodle
The Islands Look Like They're Hovering
Ooh! I want to be there right now! Instead of this windowless office that is over-airconditioned...
Be Careful When Leaving Your Cat Out In The Sunlight Too Long
This 'Square' Fire Hydrant In My Neighbourhood Is Actually Round
A Kiss
Can Anyone Figure This One Out??
Special Doggo
Broken Down Boxes At My Work Looks Like A Poorly Done Photoshop
Yep, I Thought It Was A Cone Too
Mind Your Own Business Human
Truck Delivering A New Hedge
New Look
This Is A Single Photo
I find this very esthetically pleasing, and rather 1960s Space Age-esque
My Mom Shhh’d Me So I Wouldn’t Scare Away The ‘Birds’ She Was Trying To Zoom In On
Car Crash
Tracing Design Looks Like It Overlaps
Another Melting Cat
The Airplane Has Not Fallen Over
Invisible Man Walking A Dog
Thought They Were Lifting Him Up
I Think One Of My Cats Might Be A Bit Overweight
Huge Suit
The Feet Are Pressed In The Sand, Not Sculpted…
I've seen this one before on BP. Zoom in on the right heel and you'll change the perspective
Oh No There's A Hole In The Cat
Tiny Feet
Grasshopper Destroys Town
People Really Do Take Anything Out On The Road In Michigan
That Guy In The Top Left Is Really Sticking His Neck Out To Be A Fan
Stairs
Peg Leg Boi
3D Burnout
Last set I got cost $800 for basic decent tires. Person must be rich.
