Optical illusions fool the brain with color

When we look at the picture of the Victorian magician Skylark, we observe that the horizontal lines seem to be in cross position but actually they are parallel, according to IFL Science.

The human brain is extremely complex but can easily be fooled by images that create optical illusions.

When we look at the picture of the Victorian magician Skylark, we observe that the horizontal lines seem to be in cross position but actually they are parallel, according to IFL Science.

Picture 1 of Optical illusions fool the brain with color

Horizontal lines look inclined but they are parallel.(Photo: Victoria Skye).

You can verify by narrowing your eyes, watching the phone, looking at a computer screen from one side or even using a ruler. The cause of this phenomenon is "Optical Illusion Wall Cafe" fooled the brain with alternating color arrays and dots.

This hallucination was discovered by Richard Gregory, a British psychologist, when he happened to look at a coffee shop wall in Bristol, England, in 1979. The walls of the wall seemed to be tilted. Due to the arrangement of alternating colored bricks.

"In the picture, the white and black drawings interact in opposite directions, along the horizontal line, making it appear to be tilted. This is why when the image is blurred, optical illusion Learning will disappear, " Skye said.

Update 18 December 2018
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