Waterfall Effect - Optical Illusion & Explaination
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Stare at this for a while and you'll be able to transfer the effect off your screen. - An …
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Count the bicyclists, click anywhere for a small rotation, count again... WHAT! - An …
Waterfall illusion: when you see still objects move – and what ...
Motion aftereffect - Wikipedia
Fatigued neurons explain waterfall illusion - New Scientist
Waterfall Illusion - The Illusions Index
ウェブWaterfall illusion, or motion aftereffect, is an illusion of movement. It is experienced after watching a stimulus moving in one direction for some time, and then looking at a stationary scene. The stationary scene appears to have movement (in the opposite direction to the moving stimulus …
- 詳細情報:✕この概要は、複数のオンライン ソースに基づいて AI を使用して生成されました。元のソース情報を表示するには、[詳細情報] リンクを使用します。Quick Reference A visual illusion of apparent movement created by gazing for a period of time at a fixed point in a waterfall and then looking at a stationary object, which appears to move upwards.www.oxfordreference.com/display/10.1093/oi/auth…
This description of the phenomenon helped stimulate a torrent of research, with the effect becoming known as the “waterfall illusion”. Basically, after looking at something moving in one direction for a while,...
theconversation.com/waterfall-illusion-when-you-se…He said the waterfall illusion was caused by neurons tuned to opposite directions of motion. While watching a waterfall, the brain cells that detect downward motion become tired. When the eyes look away, the cells...
www.newscientist.com/article/dn4095-fatigued-neu… - 他の人はこちらも質問
Waterfall illusion: Still objects seem to move - EarthSky
Motion Aftereffect (Waterfall Illusion) - Michael Bach
Waterfall illusion: When you see still objects …
ウェブ2019年5月30日 · Waterfall illusion: When you see still objects move—and what it tells you about your brain. by Niia Nikolova, Nick Wade, The Conversation. Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain. Humans are...
Why watching waterfalls makes the earth move | New Scientist
Don’t Go Chasing Waterfalls: Motion Aftereffects and …
ウェブ2020年9月15日 · The Waterfall Illusion is a type of motion aftereffect (MAE) known at least since the time of Aristotle (1908) (On Dreams: Part 2). It involves the apparent motion of a static object following a subject’s prolonged exposure to moving stimuli.