Why do we see illusions? - Mark Changizi

126,937 views ・ 2013-03-20

TED-Ed


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Translator: Andrea McDonough Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar
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Why do we see illusions?
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I'm going to tell you about some of my research,
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where I provided evidence for a different kind of hypothesis
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than the one that might be in the book
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on your coffee stand.
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Alright, so let's look at one of the illusions here.
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And this is a stand-in for many, many kinds of illusions
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that are explained by this hypothesis.
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I'm just going to walk through it for this particular one.
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As usual in these things,
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these two lines are, in fact, parallel,
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but you perceive them to bow outwards at their centers.
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At the center where those radial lines are,
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it's wider in your visual field than the parts above and below.
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And this is remarkable,
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because it's a remarkably simple stimulus.
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It's just a bunch of straight lines.
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Why should one of the most complicated objects in the universe
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be unable to render this incredibly simple image?
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When you want to answer questions like this,
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you need to ask,
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well, what might this mean to your brain?
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And what your brain is going to think this is,
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is not some lines on a page.
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Your brain has evolved to handle the kinds of natural stimuli
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that it encounters in real life.
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So when does the brain encounter stimuli like this?
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Well, it seems a bit odd, but in fact,
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you've been encountering this stimulus all day long.
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Whenever you move,
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whenever you move forward, in particular.
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When you move forward, you get optic flow,
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flowing outwards in your visual field,
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like when the Enterprise goes into warp.
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All of these objects flow outwards
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and they leave trails, or blur lines, on your retina.
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They're activating mini-neurons all in a row.
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So, this is a version of what happens in real life
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and this another version of what happens in real life all the time.
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In fact, cartoonists know about this.
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They put these blur lines in their cartoons
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and it means to your brain: motion.
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Now, it's not that in real life you see blur lines.
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The point is that it's the stimulus at the back of your eye
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that has these optic blurs in them,
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and that's what tells your brain that you're moving.
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When you move forward, your eyes fixate like cameras,
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like snapshot cameras,
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it fixates, it fixates, little (Snapshot sound) camera shots,
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and each time it fixates when you're moving forward,
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you get all this flowing outwards.
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So when you take a fixation,
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you end up with this weird optic blur stuff,
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and it tells you the direction you're moving.
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Alright, that's half the story.
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That's what this stimulus means.
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It means that your brain thinks,
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when it's looking at the first image,
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that you're actually on your way, moving towards the center.
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It still doesn't explain
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why you should perceive these straight lines as bowed outwards.
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To understand the rest of the story,
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you have to understand that our brains are slow.
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What you would like is that when light hits your eye,
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then -- ping! -- immediately you have a perception
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of what the world is like.
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But it doesn't work that way.
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It takes about a tenth of a second for your perception to be created.
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And a tenth of a second doesn't sound very long,
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but it's a long time in normal behaviors.
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If you're moving just at one meter per second, which is fairly slow,
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then in a tenth of second, you've moved 10 centimeters.
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So if you didn't correct for this delay,
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then anything that you perceived to be within 10 centimeters of you,
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by the time you perceived it,
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you would have bumped into it or just passed it.
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And of course, this is going to be much worse --
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(Laughter)
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it's going to be much worse in a situation like this.
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Your perception is behind.
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What you want is that your perception should look like this.
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You want your perceptions at any time T
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to be of the world at time T.
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But the only way your brain can do that, is that it has to,
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instead of generating a perception of the way the world was
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when light hit your retina,
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it has to do something fancier.
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It can't passively respond and create a best guess,
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it has to create a best guess about the next moment.
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What will the world look like in a tenth of a second?
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Build a perception of that,
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because by the time your perception of the near future occurs in your brain,
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the near future will have arrived
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and you'll have a perception of the present,
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which is what you want.
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In my research,
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I provided a lot of evidence -- and there's other research areas
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that have provided evidence --
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that the brain is filled with mechanisms
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that try to compensate for its slowness.
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And I've shown that huge swaths of illusions are explained by this,
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this just being one example.
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But let me finish by saying,
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how exactly does this explain this particular example?
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So, the question, really, we have to ask
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is: how do those two vertical lines in that first stimulus,
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how do they change in the next moment
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were I moving towards the center,
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that all those optical lines are suggesting that I'm moving.
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What happens to them?
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Well, let's imagine.
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Imagine you've got a doorway.
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You've got a doorway.
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Imagine it's a cathedral doorway, to make it more concrete --
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it'll be helpful in a second.
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When you're very far away from it,
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the sides are perfectly parallel.
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But now imagine what happens when you get closer.
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It all flows outwards in your visual field,
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flowing outwards.
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But when you're really close --
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imagine the sides of the doorway are here and here,
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but if you look up at this cathedral doorway and do your fingers like this,
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the sides of the doorway are going up,
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like railroad tracks in the sky.
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What started off as two parallel lines,
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in fact, bows outwards at eye level,
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and doesn't go outwards nearly as much above.
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So in the next moment,
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you have a shape that's more like this next picture.
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The projective geometry -- that is, the way the things project,
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in fact, change in this way in the next moment.
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So when you have a stimulus like this, well, your brain has no problem,
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there's just two vertical lines
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and no cues that there'll be a change in the next moment,
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so just render it as it is.
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But if you add cues --
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and this is just one of many kinds of cues
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that can lead to these kinds of illusions,
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this very strong optic blur cue --
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then you're going to perceive instead
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exactly how it will appear in the next moment.
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All of our perceptions are always trying to be about the present,
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but you have to perceive the future to, in fact, perceive the present.
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And these illusions are failed perceptions of the future,
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because they're just static images on the page,
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they're not changing like in real life.
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And let me just end by showing one illusion here.
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If I can, I'll quickly show two.
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This one's fun.
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If you just fixate at the middle there,
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and make stabbing motions with your head,
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looming towards it like this.
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Everybody do that.
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Make short, stabbing motions.
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Because I've added blur to these optic flow lines,
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your brain says, "They're probably already moving,
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that's why they're blurry."
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When you do it, they should be bursting out in your visual field
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faster than they should.
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They shouldn't be moving that much.
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And a final one I'll just leave in the background is this.
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Here are the cues of motion,
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the kinds of cues that you get on your retina when things are moving.
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You don't have to do anything -- just look at it.
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Raise your hand if things are moving when they shouldn't be.
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It's weird, right?
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But what you have now are the cues that, from your brain's point of view,
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you have the stimulus on your eyes, like, "Oh, these things are moving."
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Render a perception of what they'll do in the next moment --
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they should be moving and they should have shifted.
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Alright, thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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