10 Award-Winning Optical Illusions

Created by Susana Martinez-Conde and Stephen Macknik, professors of ophthalmology, neurology, physiology, and pharmacology at SUNY Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York, the book is a fascinating compilation of award-winning images from the Best Illusion of the Year contest, which Martinez-Conde and Macknik first created for a neuroscience conference in 2005. Since then, the contest has produced some truly mind-bending mind tricks that challenge our sense of perception of the world around us. As the authors write:

YOUR BRAIN CREATES A SIMULATION OF THE WORLD THAT MAY OR MAY NOT MATCH THE REAL THING. THE “REALITY” YOU EXPERIENCE IS THE RESULT OF YOUR EXCLUSIVE INTERACTION WITH THAT SIMULATION. WE DE­FINE “ILLUSIONS” AS THE PHENOMENA IN WHICH YOUR PERCEPTION DIFFERS FROM PHYSICAL REALITY IN A WAY THAT IS READILY EVIDENT. YOU MAY SEE SOMETHING THAT IS NOT THERE, OR FAIL TO SEE SOMETHING THAT IS THERE, OR SEE SOMETHING IN A WAY THAT DOES NOT REFLECT ITS PHYSICAL PROPERTIES.

JUST AS A PAINTER CREATES THE ILLUSION OF DEPTH ON A FLAT CANVAS, OUR BRAIN CREATES THE ILLUSION OF DEPTH BASED ON INFORMATION ARRIVING FROM OUR ESSENTIALLY TWO-DIMENSIONAL RETINAS. ILLUSIONS SHOW US THAT DEPTH, COLOR, BRIGHTNESS, AND SHAPE ARE NOT ABSOLUTE TERMS BUT ARE SUBJECTIVE, RELATIVE EXPERIENCES CREATED ACTIVELY BY OUR BRAIN’S CIRCUITS.

Read more