It is in your question already. An illusion will never be real. If it was real then it would be no illusion. Optical illusions are in a way real. They are real optical illusions. We can however not fake an illusion because the illusion is fake from start.
A book on optical illusions would likely fall under the Dewey Decimal Classification number 152.14, as this section covers works on visual perception and visual illusion.
Optical illusions were first used by the Greeks. They built their temples so that the roof was slanted. This gave the illusion that the temple was actually standing straight. They also made the columns bulge so that from a distance they would look perfectly proportioned. In the course of history, people have encountered illusions in many ways. Many of these illusions appear in very common, everyday experiences.
you have to process the picture in you brain to see what it is:)Its actually your brain that causes you to suffer optical illusion. Every image (color, shapes,objects) that your eyes see are processed in your brain before they are reflected back to your vision so it would be brain to eyes as opposed to eyes to brain process.
i need to know this for a science project that im doing, so if you could answer to this person, that would be great!
The frontal lobe is not directly responsible for interpreting optical illusions. Visual processing and perception are primarily handled by the occipital lobe at the back of the brain. However, the frontal lobe plays a role in higher-order cognitive functions like attention, decision-making, and problem-solving, which can influence how we perceive and interpret optical illusions.
Literal optical illusions can be any illusion so long as it looks either like two things, the opposite of what it actually is. for example: In some images, it looks like the lines are all wonky/crooked, when they are all actually straight!! I hope this helps! Also, you can type 'literal optical illusions' into Google images if you would like some images. P.S. I did try to put two images on but it wouldn't let me, sorry.
The question is too vague to be meaninful. Some optical illusions INVOLVE color, so for them I suppose the answer would be yes. Others don't, and the answer there might be either no or yes; it's difficult to say without more details.
I had big illusions that it would be my birthday soon.
MC Escher subject matter was diverse and various. Sometimes it was optical illusions and sometimes it would be a self portraits. He pioneered the concept of tessellation in art.
outline outline would it be a parliamentary procedure?No
It might or might not, depending on the illusion and the type of color blindness. Alternatively, it's possible they might see something, but different from what a trichromat (normally sighted person) would see.