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Those are particularly good examples of optical illusions. Normally these sort of articles are disappointing, but I'd not seen many of those before. Very tempted to order one of those mugs.
LOL, that mug may win "best illusion of 2018" but definitely would also win "things not to bring to the office in 2018"
Sometimes I feel like my perception of life even can be altered. For example, positive thinking can change a lot but you live same reality. (Other examples like gratitude)
I've often described colour blindness as an optical illusion, and that confetti illusion is exactly what I have in mind. Peanut better has a green lid and green label which makes the slightly ambiguous brown look green. Or the walk symbol at a cross walk - usually a light is white so I just assume that walk symbol is also white (even though I now know it's green). Or the statue of liberty - it's a big rock so I assume grey, even though I know it's green. However when any of these are looked at in isolation, it's clear what their correct colours are.
Depending on the lighted walk symbol, it may be white. I think most in the US are but some localities vary.
Studying electrical engineering I've learned an important concept: Everything is relative. Ex: to measure the voltage, we need a reference to measure it against. I think the brain works very much the same way. Every perception of reality is processed with respect to some reference.
These are great and many were new to me.

Instead of #6, the one involving moving the square from the light to dark side, I prefer the static Checker Shadow illusion[1], using the same priciple. The problem with involving electronics in it is that there always is suspicion that the machine is playing the trick instead of just your visual system.

[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Checker_shadow_illusion

There are no electronics in #6. That's just a piece of paper sliding back and forth over another piece of paper.
These are awesome! I studied cognitive psych and psychobiology at UVA in the mid 90's, and my favorite class was a seminar on perception. Illusions are a great tool for learning how our visual system works. Also, they're really cool.
These are cool. FYI some of the images are displayed at the wrong aspect ratio. The final example in particular is pretty squished, I recommend opening the image in its own tab.
Still can’t subscribe to the print edition!
I was recently investigating a CSS shadow issue that looked like an uneven shadow across the bottom of an element that had a lighter section and a darker section, but it turned out to be illusion #6! I had to do the color picker method on the shadow to convince myself, and even after I had convinced myself by drawing a single color line in between, my eyes were still fooled. Very tricky!