COLORS are the key to this optical illusion that will stop you in your tracks.
While normally complicated tests hide secret images or a camouflaged animal, this optical illusion plays with your color sensitivity.
Most people are familiar with the telltale colors of a traffic light: red, yellow, and green.
But how will your mind react when you see an image of a traffic light without a color profile?
Often your brain will fill in the blank.
Influencer and educator Dean Jackson (@beatonthebeeb) recently demonstrated the phenomena on TikTok.
Read more about optical illusions
He first shows viewers a photo of a traffic light in normal colors.
So Jackson removes all the red pixels from the scene – but to most viewers, the image won’t look that different.
Most people will still see the image as red, yellow, and green, even though the red has technically been removed.
Jackson says this is a simple example of how our brains work overtime to compensate for a lack of visual elements when making sense of an image.
To help prove the optical illusion to doubters, he zoomed in on where the red light should be and blocked out the rest of the image.
The resulting square looks distinctly gray, which is its real color.
The square appears red in the illusion because of a mental trick – nothing to do with the image.
MORE OPTICAL ILLUSIONS
If you thought this was simple, test your eyes on these driving-themed optical illusions for a challenge.
You may have a very high IQ if you can identify the two identical cars in this image in less than five seconds.
With more than a dozen seemingly copycat images of green cars, only the eagle-eyed will be able to quickly identify the pair.
If you’re having trouble finding the pair, here’s a tip: one of the cars you’re looking for is in the top row.
Try looking at different headlights and tires for faster results.
Still no luck? Here is the solution:
The road is the big missing element in the two previous illusions.
So here’s your chance to find out which road is different in a test created by researchers at Rice University.
Viewers must pay attention lest they be fooled by the obvious choice in this seemingly difficult illusion.
Kimberley D. Orsten and James R. Pomerantz won third place for the puzzle in the Best Illusion of the Year Competition.
The researchers said the illusion is truly intriguing because it shows repeating patterns.
“When we look at two images that are physically the same, they often look the same,” they said in the puzzle description. Prohibited.
“When they are different, they look different. Our illusions show the opposite.”
Rearranging the roads makes it easier to see the solution.
Make your choice? Here is the solution:
This story originally appeared on The-sun.com read the full story