In some cases, as with the blind spot experiment, the brain fills in missing information to compensate for the "missing data" coming from the blind spot region, but it can only fill in a regular pattern by sampling the area around the missing data.
In other cases, perception (which occurs in the brain) can be fooled by what the eye sees accurately.
In each of these examples,
try to identify why your perception is being fooled.
Note in the figure of the eye above that the image that comes to the eye is projected upside down onto the retina. How is it, then, that we see things "right side up"?
In some cases, as with the blind spot experiment, the brain fills in missing information to compensate for the "missing data" coming from the blind spot region, but it can only fill in a regular pattern by sampling the area around the missing data. In other cases, perception (which occurs in the brain) can be fooled by what the eye sees accurately. In each of these examples, try to identify why your perception is being fooled. Note in the figure of the eye above that the image that comes to the eye is projected upside down onto the retina. How is it, then, that we see things "right side up"?
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..
![](//thimg.ilovetranslation.com/pic/loading_3.gif?v=b9814dd30c1d7c59_8619)
In some cases, as with the blind spot experiment, the brain fills in missing information to compensate for the "missing data" coming from the blind spot region, but it can only fill in a regular pattern by sampling the area around the missing data.
In other cases, perception (which occurs in the brain) can be fooled by what the eye sees accurately.
In each of these examples,
try to identify why your perception is being fooled.
Note in the figure of the eye above that the image that comes to the eye is projected upside down onto the retina. How is it, then, that we see things "right side up"?
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..
![](//thimg.ilovetranslation.com/pic/loading_3.gif?v=b9814dd30c1d7c59_8619)