Blog Search
Archive
Blog Statistics
  • Views: 3661053
  • Articles: 1366
  • Comments: 1027
  • Status: Public
  • Who's Viewing: 8
  • Guest
  • Guest
  • Guest
  • Guest
  • Guest
  • Guest
  • Guest
  • Guest
8 Guests  0 Members
Posted by duddy   October 19, 2018   3838 views
A cognitive neuroscientist explains that the biological reason the image 'moves' is because the V5 (middle temporal visual area) part of your brain – devoted to motion processing – activates or fires due to the V4 part of your brain – devoted to colour and shape – becomes overstimulated.

In fact, V4 neurons are saturated so much that the resting firing frequency of middle temporal neurons is interpreted as an actual sensory signal. The effect of this illusion strictly depends on several factors, namely on the receptive field sizes (the illusion changes as a function of viewing distance), V4 preference for spirals and spheres, and the middle temporal involvement in 3D and stereopsis. It is a very complex interaction, that rarely lead to such illusions.

Brain Illusions neuroscientist vision neurons
Posted in Research
You might also like...
No Comments | Write Comment
Random Article
   RSS Feed     Atom Feed     RDF Feed