Silencing
This article is about silencing in vision. For silencing in politics, see censorship. For the idiomatic use, see bribery. For the extreme colloquial variant, see murder.
Silencing is a visual illusion in which a set of objects that change in luminance, hue, size, or shape appears to stop changing when it moves. It was discovered by Jordan Suchow[2] and George Alvarez[3] of Harvard University, and described in a paper published in Current Biology.[4] Silencing won the Neural Correlate Society's "Best visual illusion of the year contest" in 2011.[5]
References
- ↑ Demonstrations of silencing
- ↑ Jordan Suchow is online at http://jwsu.ch/ow/
- ↑ George Alvarez is online at http://visionlab.harvard.edu/Members/George/Welcome.html
- ↑ Suchow, J.W., & Alvarez, G.A. (2011). Motion silences awareness of visual change. Current Biology. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2010.12.019
- ↑ http://www.livescience.com/14097-visual-illusion-contest-motion-perception-change-blindness.html
See also
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