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Thursday, 14 June 2012

WOW!!! Your brain develops the negative

This is interesting..... Though an interesting piece of information forwarded to me, I didn't want to breach the information security aspect by forwarding to all my address chain and make an eye opener for the spammers. So, sharing it here.
This glimpse just takes a few minutes.
Read the instructions.. 



click this negative print to enlarge
Instructions
1. Stare at the red dot on this Indian Actress - Deepika Padukone's nose for approx. 40 seconds. 
2. Turn your eyes to a plain surface (blank wall, or white surface).
3. Blink repeatedly and quickly. See the color transformation.
as understood, what you should see is a full color representation of the image as your focal point of retina and brain processes the negative image.  Our visual system is constantly processing input and can fool us or create illusions from retinal or cortical processes.  This illusion example is called a negative afterimage that is caused by adaptation of the photo receptors in the retina.  Forcing one's eyes to fixate on a point (in this case the dot on Deepika Padukone nose) reduces the normal jitter or micro jerks that constantly occur as we scan things in our visual world.  The micro saccades normally cause images to "dance" over the surface of the eye eliminating the possibility of too much adaptation if an image remains static over one group of photo receptors for too long.  In fact, if one was to eliminate all movement of the eye, and we were to fixate on a single point, our perception of our visual world would fade away.  So, what happens in this illusion is that when we look from the first image to the grey space or to a large plain surface, the photoreceptors that become adapted no longer signal effectively, but the photoreceptors surrounding the adapted photoreceptors strongly signal perhaps signaling opponent cells in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) involved in color vision.

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