Optical illusions show how we see | Beau Lotto

3,116,305 views ・ 2009-10-08

TED


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

00:13
I want to start with a game. Okay?
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And to win this game,
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all you have to do is see the reality that's in front of you
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as it really is, all right?
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So we have two panels here, of colored dots.
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And one of those dots is the same in the two panels.
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And you have to tell me which one.
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Now, I narrowed it down
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to the gray one, the green one, and, say, the orange one.
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So by a show of hands, we'll start with the easiest one.
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Show of hands: how many people think it's the gray one?
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Really? Okay.
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How many people think it's the green one?
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And how many people think it's the orange one?
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Pretty even split.
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Let's find out what the reality is.
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Here is the orange one.
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(Laughter)
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Here is the green one.
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And here is the gray one.
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(Laughter)
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So for all of you who saw that, you're complete realists.
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All right?
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(Laughter)
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So this is pretty amazing, isn't it?
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Because nearly every living system
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has evolved the ability to detect light in one way or another.
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So for us, seeing color
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is one of the simplest things the brain does.
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And yet, even at this most fundamental level,
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context is everything.
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What I'm going to talk about is not that context is everything,
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but why context is everything.
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Because it's answering that question
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that tells us not only why we see what we do,
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but who we are as individuals,
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and who we are as a society.
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But first, we have to ask another question,
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which is, "What is color for?"
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And instead of telling you, I'll just show you.
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What you see here is a jungle scene,
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and you see the surfaces according to the amount of light
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that those surfaces reflect.
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Now, can any of you see the predator that's about to jump out at you?
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And if you haven't seen it yet, you're dead, right?
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(Laughter)
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Can anyone see it? Anyone? No?
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Now let's see the surfaces
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according to the quality of light that they reflect.
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And now you see it.
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So, color enables us to see
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the similarities and differences between surfaces,
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according to the full spectrum of light that they reflect.
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But what you've just done
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is in many respects mathematically impossible.
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Why?
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Because, as Berkeley tells us,
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we have no direct access to our physical world,
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other than through our senses.
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And the light that falls onto our eyes
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is determined by multiple things in the world,
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not only the color of objects,
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but also the color of their illumination,
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and the color of the space between us and those objects.
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You vary any one of those parameters,
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and you'll change the color of the light that falls onto your eye.
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This is a huge problem,
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because it means that the same image
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could have an infinite number of possible real-world sources.
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Let me show you what I mean.
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Imagine that this is the back of your eye, okay?
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And these are two projections from the world.
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They're identical in every single way.
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Identical in shape, size, spectral content.
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They are the same, as far as your eye is concerned.
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And yet they come from completely different sources.
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The one on the right comes from a yellow surface,
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in shadow, oriented facing the left,
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viewed through a pinkish medium.
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The one on the left comes from an orange surface,
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under direct light, facing to the right,
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viewed through sort of a bluish medium.
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Completely different meanings,
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giving rise to the exact same retinal information.
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And yet it's only the retinal information that we get.
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So how on Earth do we even see?
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So if you remember anything in this next 18 minutes,
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remember this:
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that the light that falls onto your eye,
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sensory information, is meaningless,
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because it could mean literally anything.
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And what's true for sensory information is true for information generally.
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There's no inherent meaning in information.
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It's what we do with that information that matters.
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So, how do we see? Well, we see by learning to see.
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The brain evolved the mechanisms for finding patterns,
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finding relationships in information,
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and associating those relationships with a behavioral meaning,
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a significance, by interacting with the world.
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We're very aware of this
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in the form of more cognitive attributes, like language.
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I'm going to give you some letter strings,
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and I want you to read them out for me, if you can.
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Audience: "Can you read this?"
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"You are not reading this."
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"What are you reading?"
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Beau Lotto: "What are you reading?" Half the letters are missing, right?
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There's no a priori reason
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why an "H" has to go between that "W" and "A."
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But you put one there. Why?
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Because in the statistics of your past experience,
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it would have been useful to do so.
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So you do so again.
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And yet you don't put a letter after that first "T."
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Why? Because it wouldn't have been useful in the past.
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So you don't do it again.
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So, let me show you how quickly our brains can redefine normality,
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even at the simplest thing the brain does, which is color.
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So if I could have the lights down up here.
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I want you to first notice that those two desert scenes are physically the same.
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One is simply the flipping of the other.
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Now I want you to look at that dot
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between the green and the red.
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And I want you to stare at that dot. Don't look anywhere else.
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We're going to look at it for about 30 seconds,
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which is a bit of a killer in an 18-minute talk.
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(Laughter)
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But I really want you to learn.
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And I'll tell you -- don't look anywhere else --
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I'll tell you what's happening in your head.
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Your brain is learning,
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and it's learning that the right side of its visual field
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is under red illumination;
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the left side of its visual field is under green illumination.
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That's what it's learning. Okay?
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Now, when I tell you, I want you to look at the dot between the two desert scenes.
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So why don't you do that now?
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(Laughter)
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Can I have the lights up again?
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I take it from your response they don't look the same anymore, right?
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(Applause)
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Why? Because your brain is seeing that same information
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as if the right one is still under red light,
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and the left one is still under green light.
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That's your new normal.
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Okay? So, what does this mean for context?
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It means I can take two identical squares,
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put them in light and dark surrounds,
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and the one on the dark surround looks lighter than on the light surround.
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What's significant is not simply the light and dark surrounds that matter.
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It's what those light and dark surrounds meant for your behavior in the past.
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So I'll show you what I mean.
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Here we have that exact same illusion.
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We have two identical tiles on the left,
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one in a dark surround, one in a light surround.
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And the same thing over on the right.
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Now, I'll reveal those two scenes,
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but I'm not going to change anything within those boxes,
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except their meaning.
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And see what happens to your perception.
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Notice that on the left
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the two tiles look nearly completely opposite:
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one very white and one very dark, right?
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Whereas on the right, the two tiles look nearly the same.
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And yet there is still one on a dark surround,
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and one on a light surround.
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Why?
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Because if the tile in that shadow were in fact in shadow,
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and reflecting the same amount of light to your eye
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as the one outside the shadow,
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it would have to be more reflective -- just the laws of physics.
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So you see it that way.
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Whereas on the right, the information is consistent
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with those two tiles being under the same light.
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If they're under the same light reflecting the same amount of light to your eye,
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then they must be equally reflective.
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So you see it that way.
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Which means we can bring all this information together
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to create some incredibly strong illusions.
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This is one I made a few years ago.
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And you'll notice you see a dark brown tile at the top,
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and a bright orange tile at the side.
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That is your perceptual reality.
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The physical reality is that those two tiles are the same.
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Here you see four gray tiles on your left,
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seven gray tiles on the right.
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I'm not going to change those tiles at all,
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but I'm going to reveal the rest of the scene.
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And see what happens to your perception.
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The four blue tiles on the left are gray.
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The seven yellow tiles on the right are also gray.
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They are the same. Okay?
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Don't believe me? Let's watch it again.
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What's true for color is also true for complex perceptions of motion.
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So, here we have --
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let's turn this around -- a diamond.
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And what I'm going to do is, I'm going to hold it here,
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and I'm going to spin it.
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And for all of you, you'll see it probably spinning this direction.
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Now I want you to keep looking at it.
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Move your eyes around, blink, maybe close one eye.
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And suddenly it will flip, and start spinning the opposite direction.
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Yes? Raise your hand if you got that. Yes?
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Keep blinking.
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Every time you blink, it will switch.
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So I can ask you, which direction is it rotating?
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How do you know?
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Your brain doesn't know, because both are equally likely.
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So depending on where it looks,
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it flips between the two possibilities.
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Are we the only ones that see illusions?
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The answer to this question is no.
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Even the beautiful bumblebee,
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with its mere one million brain cells,
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which is 250 times fewer cells than you have in one retina,
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sees illusions, does the most complicated things
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that even our most sophisticated computers can't do.
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So in my lab we work on bumblebees,
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because we can completely control their experience,
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and see how it alters the architecture of their brain.
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We do this in what we call the Bee Matrix.
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Here you have the hive.
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You can see the queen bee, the large bee in the middle.
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Those are her daughters, the eggs.
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They go back and forth between this hive and the arena, via this tube.
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You'll see one of the bees come out here.
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You see how she has a little number on her?
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There's another one coming out, she also has a number on her.
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Now, they're not born that way, right?
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We pull them out, put them in the fridge, and they fall asleep.
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Then you can superglue little numbers on them.
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(Laughter)
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And now, in this experiment they get a reward if they go to the blue flowers.
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They land on the flower,
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stick their tongue in there, called a proboscis, and drink sugar water.
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She's drinking a glass of water that's about that big to you and I,
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will do that about three times, then fly.
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And sometimes they learn not to go to the blue,
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but to go where the other bees go.
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So they copy each other.
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They can count to five. They can recognize faces.
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And here she comes down the ladder.
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And she'll come into the hive, find an empty honey pot,
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and throw up, and that's honey.
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(Laughter)
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Now remember, she's supposed to be going to the blue flowers,
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but what are these bees doing in the upper right corner?
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It looks like they're going to green flowers.
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Now, are they getting it wrong?
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And the answer to the question is no. Those are actually blue flowers.
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But those are blue flowers under green light.
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So they're using the relationships between the colors to solve the puzzle,
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which is exactly what we do.
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So, illusions are often used,
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especially in art, in the words of a more contemporary artist,
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"to demonstrate the fragility of our senses."
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Okay, this is complete rubbish.
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The senses aren't fragile. And if they were, we wouldn't be here.
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Instead, color tells us something completely different,
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that the brain didn't actually evolve to see the world the way it is.
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We can't.
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Instead, the brain evolved to see the world
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the way it was useful to see in the past.
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And how we see is by continually redefining normality.
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So, how can we take this incredible capacity of plasticity of the brain
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and get people to experience their world differently?
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Well, one of the ways we do it in my lab and studio
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is we translate the light into sound,
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and we enable people to hear their visual world.
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And they can navigate the world using their ears.
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Here's David on the right, and he's holding a camera.
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On the left is what his camera sees.
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And you'll see there's a faint line going across that image.
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That line is broken up into 32 squares.
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In each square, we calculate the average color.
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And then we just simply translate that into sound.
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And now he's going to turn around,
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close his eyes,
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and find a plate on the ground with his eyes closed.
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(Continuous sound)
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(Sound changes momentarily)
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(Sound changes momentarily)
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(Sound changes momentarily)
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(Sound changes momentarily)
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(Sound changes momentarily)
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Beau Lotto: He finds it. Amazing, right?
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So not only can we create a prosthetic for the visually impaired,
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but we can also investigate
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how people literally make sense of the world.
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But we can also do something else.
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We can also make music with color.
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So, working with kids,
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they created images,
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thinking about what might the images you see
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sound like if we could listen to them.
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And then we translated these images.
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And this is one of those images.
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And this is a six-year-old child composing a piece of music
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for a 32-piece orchestra.
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And this is what it sounds like.
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(Electronic representation of orchestral music)
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So, a six-year-old child. Okay?
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Now, what does all this mean?
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What this suggests is that no one is an outside observer of nature, okay?
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We're not defined by our central properties,
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by the bits that make us up.
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We're defined by our environment and our interaction with that environment,
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by our ecology.
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And that ecology is necessarily relative, historical and empirical.
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So, what I'd like to finish with is this over here.
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Because what I've been trying to do is really celebrate uncertainty.
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Because I think only through uncertainty is there potential for understanding.
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So, if some of you are still feeling a bit too certain,
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I'd like to do this one.
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So, if we have the lights down.
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And what we have here --
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Can everyone see 25 purple surfaces on your left,
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15:03
and 25, call it yellowish, surfaces on your right?
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So now, what I want to do,
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I'm going to put the middle nine surfaces here
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under yellow illumination,
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by simply putting a filter behind them.
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Now you can see that changes the light that's coming through there, right?
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Because now the light is going through a yellowish filter
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and then a purplish filter.
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I'm going to do the opposite on the left here.
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I'm going to put the middle nine under a purplish light.
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Now, some of you will have noticed that the consequence
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is that the light coming through those middle nine on the right,
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or your left, is exactly the same as the light
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coming through the middle nine on your right.
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Agreed? Yes?
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Okay. So they are physically the same.
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Let's pull the covers off.
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Now remember --
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you know that the middle nine are exactly the same.
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Do they look the same?
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No.
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The question is, "Is that an illusion?"
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And I'll leave you with that.
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So, thank you very much.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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About this website

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