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Motion Aftereffect, Optical Illusions Wiki

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Motion Aftereffect, Optical Illusions Wiki

The motion aftereffect (MAE) is a visual illusion experienced after viewing a moving visual stimulus for a time (tens of milliseconds to minutes) with stationary eyes, and then fixating a stationary stimulus. The stationary stimulus appears to move in the opposite direction to the original (physically moving) stimulus. The motion aftereffect is believed to be the result of motion adaptation. For example, if one looks at a waterfall for about a minute and then looks at the stationary rocks at the

Akiyoshi's illusion pages

Akiyoshi's illusion pages

Afterimage: An Eye-Boggling Optical Illusion

Afterimage: An Eye-Boggling Optical Illusion

Eleven puzzling optical illusions and how they work - Interesting

Eleven puzzling optical illusions and how they work - Interesting

Hack Your Brain: The McCollough Effect

Hack Your Brain: The McCollough Effect

Motion Aftereffect Demo

Motion Aftereffect Demo

Optical illusion - Wikipedia

Optical illusion - Wikipedia

Motion Aftereffects - Page 7

Motion Aftereffects - Page 7

The Brains Blog

The Brains Blog

Motion Aftereffect, Optical Illusions Wiki

Motion Aftereffect, Optical Illusions Wiki

Waterfall illusion: Still objects seem to move

Waterfall illusion: Still objects seem to move

GMUNK - NFTs

GMUNK - NFTs

How our brains cause common 'aftereffect' optical illusion - Futurity

How our brains cause common 'aftereffect' optical illusion - Futurity