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Do you see straight or curved lines? ‘Irritating’ optical illusion tricks your brain into seeing a warped grid

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When you look at the picture below, do you see straight or curved lines? 

That’s the debate triggered by the viral optical illusion that’s now raging on social media. 

The image is an eight-by-eight grid of grey squares separated by narrow green lines – almost like a bird’s-eye view of a city. 

Bizarrely, when we look at the image, the green lines appear to be constantly moving and curling in all directions.

But the moment we focus on any one particular line, it looks perfectly straight. 

The seemingly shape-shifting image is perplexing users on Reddit, who described it as ‘irritating’, ‘neat’ and ‘fantastic’. 

One user replied: ‘This is genuinely irritating. Well done.’ 

Another posted: ‘Brain now broken thanks.’ 

The image posted on Reddit shows grey bricks met with green lines that intersect to create a grid - but the lines appear to be moving even though they're not

The image posted on Reddit shows grey bricks met with green lines that intersect to create a grid – but the lines appear to be moving even though they’re not

The stunning image was created by Florida-based illustrator Lesha Porche, who shared it on her Facebook page in December 2021. 

Dr Jolyon Troscianko, a visual ecologist at the University of Exeter who studies animal perception systems, called it a ‘very interesting illusion’.

He pointed out that it only seems to affect the ‘peripheral vision’ – what we see beyond our direct line of sight, or out of the corner of our eye. 

‘The bits I’m looking straight at have straight lines, but the lines further from where I’m directly fixated go all curved,’ Dr Troscianko told the Daily Mail. 

The answer to why this illusion works appears to be hidden inside the grey squares, of which there are 64 in total. 

Looking closely inside the grey squares, we can see tiny grey shapes of various shades and sizes, like assortments of little pebbles.   

It is these little shapes that trick the brain into thinking the straight green lines are curved rather than straight, the academic suggested. 

‘Hidden in those little grey squares are actually a series of lines/stripes at different angles,’ Dr Troscianko said.

To illustrate the hidden power of the image, Dr Troscianko passed it through a computer model he developed as part of a 2023 study. Note the hidden curved lines in the boxes that play havoc with our peripheral vision

To illustrate the hidden power of the image, Dr Troscianko passed it through a computer model he developed as part of a 2023 study. Note the hidden curved lines in the boxes that play havoc with our peripheral vision 

What is peripheral vision? 

Peripheral vision is what we see beyond our direct line of sight, or out of the corner of our eye 

Peripheral vision helps us to see things next to us without turning our head – and makes up the biggest portion of our visual field

In comparison, our central vision, made up of a small eye region called the fovea, makes up a very small portion of our visual field. 

Compared to animals like cats and dogs, our peripheral vision quite narrow – meaning we’re less adept at seeing things out of our field of view. 

‘When we look directly at these grey squares they appear random, but to our peripheral vision these lines become much more apparent.’ 

To illustrate the hidden power of the image, Dr Troscianko passed it through a computer model he developed as part of a 2023 study

The computer model replicates how human vision can see ‘contrasts’, which in this context just means the difference between shades of grey. 

And it reveals patterns in the original image that are otherwise difficult to spot. Namely, there are hidden curved lines formed by the ‘pebbles’ that play havoc with our peripheral vision. 

‘There are actually hidden patterns in those grey squares that are obvious to our peripheral vision,’ Dr Troscianko said.

Our peripheral vision helps us to see things next to us without turning our head and makes up the biggest portion of our visual field. In comparison, our central vision, made up of a small eye region called the fovea, makes up a very small portion of our visual field. 

‘Our eyes have a ‘high resolution’ (high acuity) region called the fovea, and when we look directly at something this region is used,’ Dr Troscianko said.

‘When we look straight at them (and use our high-powered foveal vision) we can’t see them.’ 

Peripheral vision helps us to see things next to us without turning our head - and makes up the biggest portion of our visual field In comparison, our central vision, made up of a small eye region called the fovea, makes up a very small portion of our visual field. Not the fovea in this diagram of the human eye

Peripheral vision helps us to see things next to us without turning our head – and makes up the biggest portion of our visual field In comparison, our central vision, made up of a small eye region called the fovea, makes up a very small portion of our visual field. Not the fovea in this diagram of the human eye 

In any case, just like many other optical illusions, the image is not moving before our very eyes at all. 

Optical illusions work because our eyes and brain ‘speak to each other in a very simple language, like a child who doesn’t know many words’, according to experts at the University of Queensland’s Brain Institute.

‘Most of the time that’s not a problem and our brain is able to understand what the eyes tell it,’ they say.

‘But your brain also has to “fill in the blanks” meaning it has to make some guesses based on the simple clues from the eyes.

‘Mostly those guesses are right… sometimes, however, the brain guesses wrong.’

ANIMALS SEE USING COMPLEX STRUCTURES IN THEIR EYES

Animals, including humans, have a variety of complex structures in their eyes which allow them to see.

The pupil contracts to limit how much light is allowed in, much like a camera lens.  

Most animals have both cones and rods in their eyes, which are called photoreceptors and are found in the retina. 

Cones allow people to see colour and rods are sensitive to low-light levels which allows for a grey scale between black and white.  

Humans, and many other animals, have three types of cones which each absorbs different wavelength of lights. 

With short, medium and long wavelength cones, the range of cones allows for a range of vision which incorporates the visible light spectrum.

This includes colours between red and blue – wavelengths ranging between 390 an 700 nm.

Other species, including many birds,  have four cones instead of three in a mutation known as tertrachromacy. 

This allows for animals to see light of an unusually short wavelength, which is normally considered to be UV light. 

These photoreceptors are triggered by light and then this produces an electrical signal as they change shape. 

Electrical signals are then carried to the brain via the optic nerve. 

Signals from both optic nerves are then brought together by the brain at  a point called the optic chiasm where the brain compares the two images.

This is what gives animals an understanding of depth and how far away objects are in their field of vision.  

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