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Illusions

If you stare at the following picture long enough,
you should see a giraffe...

giraffe

Gotcha! But the rest of these optical illusions are on the level.

What are illusions? Illusions trick us into perceiving something differently than it actually exists, so what we see does not correspond to physical reality. Hence, the word illusion comes from the Latin verb illudere meaning, "to mock." In addition, some illusions show us one thing in a picture, while someone else sees something entirely different in the same picture.

Research scientists must be sure that the results of their work are not "illusory" in nature. They need to accurately report what "is," rather than their general "impression" of "what is." So, many times a scientist will repeat an experiment many times, or in different laboratories, to ensure that their results were valid. Science is only "good science" when anyone can repeat the experiment and get the same results.

 

Lots and Lots and Lots of Illusions

Looking up, or looking down?

Count the black dots

Are the lines parallel?

Elephant

One black dot

Man or woman

Rabbit or duck

A skull?

Who do you see?

Two faces or one
Face up or face down

How many people?

Which is tallest?

A face or a word

What do you see?

Circles

How many horses?

Columns

Old or young?

Impossible

Rocky faces
On the dot

Two elderly faces, or....

Faces or places?

Mountain stream

Ring

Ships and clouds

Puzzle

Four more

Last three!