Your brain invents what you see
Optical illusions expose how your brain actively constructs what you see, filling in gaps to create a seamless, yet sometimes deceptive, visual reality.
Optical illusions reveal how your brain actively constructs your visual world, rather than just passively recording it. Instead of seeing exactly what's there, your brain fills in missing information using prior knowledge and patterns. For example, in the Kanizsa triangle illusion from 1955, three incomplete circles trick your brain into seeing a solid white triangle that doesn't actually exist.
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