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OPTICAL ILLUSION
Zöllner's illusion; Zollner's illusion; Zollner illusion; Zoellner illusion; Zoellner's illusion; Zollner Illusion

Fiscal illusion         
A FAILURE TO ACCURATELY PERCEIVE THE AMOUNT OF GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE WHEN GOVERNMENT REVENUES ARE NOT COMPLETELY TRANSPARENT OR ARE NOT FULLY PERCEIVED BY TAXPAYERS
Fiscal Illusion
In public choice theory, fiscal illusion is a failure to accurately perceive the amount of government expenditure. The theory of fiscal illusion was first developed by the Italian economist Amilcare Puviani in his 1903 book Teoria della illusione finanziaria (Theory of Financial Illusion (not yet translated into English, but translated into German in 1960 under the title Die Illusionen in der öffentlichen Finanzwirtschaft, Berlin: Dunker & Humblot, 1960)).
Cornsweet illusion         
  • In an example of the Cornsweet illusion, the whole left half of this rectangle seems to be lighter than the right. In fact they have the same brightness, apart from the gradients in the center.
  • The same image as above, but the edge in the middle is hidden: the left and right part of the image appear as the same color.
  • The actual distribution of luminance in the picture, and the typical perception of luminance.
The Cornsweet illusion, also known as the Craik–O'Brien–Cornsweet illusion or the Craik–Cornsweet illusion, is an optical illusion that was described in detail by Tom Cornsweet in the late 1960s.Cornsweet T (1970) Visual Perception.
Size–weight illusion         
PERCEPTIONAL ILLUSION
Charpentier illusion; Charpentier-Koseleff illusion; Size-weight illusion; DeMoor's illusion; De Moor's illusion; Demoor's sign
The size–weight illusion, also known as the Charpentier illusion, is named after the French physician Augustin Charpentier because he was the first to demonstrate the illusion experimentally.

ويكيبيديا

Zöllner illusion

The Zöllner illusion is an optical illusion named after its discoverer, German astrophysicist Johann Karl Friedrich Zöllner. In 1860, Zöllner sent his discovery in a letter to physicist and scholar Johann Christian Poggendorff, editor of Annalen der Physik und Chemie, who subsequently discovered the related Poggendorff illusion in Zöllner's original drawing.

One depiction of the illusion consists of a series of parallel, black diagonal lines which are crossed with short, repeating lines, the direction of the crossing lines alternating between horizontal and vertical. This creates the illusion that the black lines are not parallel. The shorter lines are on an angle to the longer lines, and this angle helps to create the impression that one end of the longer lines is nearer to the viewer than the other end. This is similar to the way the Wundt illusion appears. It may be that the Zöllner illusion is caused by this impression of depth.

This illusion is similar to the Hering illusion, Poggendorff illusion, Müller-Lyer illusion, and Café wall illusion. All these illusions demonstrate how lines can seem to be distorted by their background.