What are those colors you see when you rub your eyes? - Paul CJ Taylor

18,037 views ・ 2024-10-17

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In the late 1600s, Isaac Newton conducted a series of experiments
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that broke the two most fundamental rules of eye safety—
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in one, he stared at the sun,
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and in the other he stuck a needle under his eyeball.
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Newton was hoping to better understand the lights and colors
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that sometimes appear when your eyes are closed.
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If you've ever sat around an evening campfire or, unlike Newton,
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unintentionally glanced at the sun,
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you may have noticed illuminated patterns briefly dance along your vision
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before fading into darkness.
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So how do these visual illusions, known as afterimages, form?
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Inside the retina, specialized cells called photoreceptors
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take in light and turn it into a signal the brain can understand.
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Photoreceptors contain thousands of molecules called photopigments,
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which are sensitive to particular colors.
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When a light-photon strikes a pigment, part of the photopigment’s structure,
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known as chromophore,
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absorbs the energy by temporarily altering its molecular structure
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in a process called bleaching.
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This reconfiguration induces a cascade of chemical reactions
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that route an electrical pulse to the brain.
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And once your brain assembles the signals
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from approximately 200 million photoreceptor cells,
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you see an image.
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So how does this lead to an afterimage?
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Scientists aren't quite sure,
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but a leading theory suggests that photoreceptors may be to blame.
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Looking at something bright causes many pigments in a photoreceptor to bleach.
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In this state, photopigments can't absorb light well and need to regenerate.
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However, it's believed that photoreceptor cells momentarily continue to fire
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and to send signals to the brain,
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transforming the blazing campfire to a bright pattern as you close your eyes.
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This is known as a positive afterimage.
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Positive afterimages normally fade within a few seconds,
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and, under certain conditions,
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can be replaced by what is known as a negative afterimage.
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The original colors appear to be swapped for their approximate complement:
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blue with yellow, red with cyan, green with magenta.
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If you fixate on a bright image of a green flower on a yellow background,
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then glance at a white screen, or close your eyes,
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you will see a negative afterimage of a magenta flower on a blue background.
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Scientists are still working to understand the origins of negative afterimages,
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and there are multiple theories.
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Some evidence suggests the source lies in the layers of neuronal cells
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in the retina called ganglion cells,
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while other research implicates deeper processing in the brain.
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Another theory suggests the source lies, again, in the photoreceptors.
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The idea is that certain cells are activated if one color—
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such as green— is viewed.
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Meanwhile, other cells that are normally activated by viewing red—
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green’s complement— are then left deactivated.
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But if you stare at a green image for an extended period of time,
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it's thought that while the activated green cells become fatigued,
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the red cells are still sensitive to input.
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As a result, when you look away or close your eyes,
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the opposing red cells are momentarily more active than the tired green cells,
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creating the perception of a color that is close to the original color’s complement.
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But scientists still don’t know for sure.
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And yet another puzzling visual illusion involves no light or staring at all.
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Simply rubbing, or like Newton, inadvisably stabbing behind your eye
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can generate the brief appearance of lights and colors.
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These are known as pressure phosphenes.
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Newton hypothesized that the colorful circles of light
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were caused by the physical bending of his retina.
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Today, some scientists believe that pressure phosphenes
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are indeed the result of distortion—
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that rubbing or poking your eyes physically stretches neurons,
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bending the photoreceptors out of shape and causing them to fire.
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But again, the science of phosphenes is far from settled,
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and there are other ways they can form.
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For example, during procedures where magnetic pulses are sent
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into specific parts of the brain,
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some people, including those with certain types of blindness,
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report seeing flashes of light.
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And astronauts, traveling where few others have gone before,
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often describe seeing similar effects when exposed to cosmic radiation
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from the Sun and other stars.
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