A Perspective on 3-D Visual Illusions [Mind Matters]

Wednesday, July 9, 2008 - 11:42 in Mathematics & Economics

This is the second article in a new Mind Matters series on the neuroscience behind visual illusions. How could we have missed it? Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of visual scientists, psychologists, neuroscientists, visual artists, architects, engineers and biologists all missed it--until now. The “it” in question is the Leaning Tower Illusion, discovered by Frederick Kingdom, Ali Yoonessi, and Elena Gheorghiu of McGill University. In this illusion, two identical side-by-side images of the same tilted and receding object appear to be leaning at two different angles [see slideshow]. This incredible effect was first noticed just last year in images of the famed Leaning Tower of Pisa, but it also works with paired images of other tilted objects. [More]

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