illusion$37532$ - translation to spanish
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illusion$37532$ - translation to spanish

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

illusion      
n. ilusión, ensueño, espejismo, falacia
optical illusion         
  • hollow face illusion]] which makes concave masks appear to be jutting out (or convex).
  • [[Rabbit–duck illusion]]
  • Simultaneous contrast illusion. The background is a [[color gradient]] and progresses from dark gray to light gray. The horizontal bar appears to progress from light grey to dark grey, but is in fact just one color.
  • Gregory's categorization of illusions.<ref name=" Gregory" />
  • Kanizsa's triangle]]
  • contrast]] between edges of the slightly differing shades of gray as soon as they come in contact with one another.
  • motion induced blindness]]: while fixating on the flashing dot, the stationary dots may disappear due to the brain prioritizing motion information.
  • "The Organ Player" – [[Pareidolia]] phenomenon in [[Neptune's Grotto]] [[stalactite]] cave ([[Alghero]], [[Sardinia]])
  • Top-down processing involves using action plans to make perceptual interpretations and vice versa. (This is impaired in schizophrenia.)
  • phantom limb syndrome]] senses.
  • [[Ponzo illusion]]
  • "Shepard tables" deconstructed. The two tabletops appear to be different, but they are the same size and shape.
  • figure-ground]] illusion
  • The [[vertical–horizontal illusion]] where the vertical line is thought to be longer than the horizontal
VISUALLY PERCEIVED IMAGES THAT DIFFER FROM OBJECTIVE REALITY
Visual illusion; Optical illusions; Visual illusions; Trick of the eye; Optical Illusion; Optical Illusions; Circularvection; Eye illusion; Optic illusion; Perceptual organization; Cube dilemma; Montasir
(n.) = ilusión óptica, efecto óptico
Ex: Optical illusion affects our sense of reality.
optical illusion         
  • hollow face illusion]] which makes concave masks appear to be jutting out (or convex).
  • [[Rabbit–duck illusion]]
  • Simultaneous contrast illusion. The background is a [[color gradient]] and progresses from dark gray to light gray. The horizontal bar appears to progress from light grey to dark grey, but is in fact just one color.
  • Gregory's categorization of illusions.<ref name=" Gregory" />
  • Kanizsa's triangle]]
  • contrast]] between edges of the slightly differing shades of gray as soon as they come in contact with one another.
  • motion induced blindness]]: while fixating on the flashing dot, the stationary dots may disappear due to the brain prioritizing motion information.
  • "The Organ Player" – [[Pareidolia]] phenomenon in [[Neptune's Grotto]] [[stalactite]] cave ([[Alghero]], [[Sardinia]])
  • Top-down processing involves using action plans to make perceptual interpretations and vice versa. (This is impaired in schizophrenia.)
  • phantom limb syndrome]] senses.
  • [[Ponzo illusion]]
  • "Shepard tables" deconstructed. The two tabletops appear to be different, but they are the same size and shape.
  • figure-ground]] illusion
  • The [[vertical–horizontal illusion]] where the vertical line is thought to be longer than the horizontal
VISUALLY PERCEIVED IMAGES THAT DIFFER FROM OBJECTIVE REALITY
Visual illusion; Optical illusions; Visual illusions; Trick of the eye; Optical Illusion; Optical Illusions; Circularvection; Eye illusion; Optic illusion; Perceptual organization; Cube dilemma; Montasir
ilusión óptica

Definition

optical illusion
¦ noun a thing that deceives the eye by appearing to be other than it is.

Wikipedia

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.