Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

The Rabbit Illusion - This Optical Illusion is Baffling People Online

IANS, 26 Oct, 2018 08:44 PM
    Researchers at Caltech in California, USA, have created an optical illusion that's based on sound - and it has left thousands of netizens confused. The illusion, called 'the Rabbit Illusion', asks viewers to look at a cross at the top of the screen. While doing that, they hear a few ticking sounds and see some flashes at the bottom.
     
     
    The question is, how many flashes do they see?
     
     
    According to Insider, most people see three flashes when the sound is playing. However, there are actually only two flashes, and the trick lies in the sound. Since there are three ticking sounds, our mind creates a third flash to match, which is called an "illusory flash."
     
     
    Grab your earphones and watch the video yourself:
     
     
     
     
    Since being shared online two weeks ago, the illusion has been viewed over 3.5 lakh times on YouTube and has collected a ton of confused and impressed comments.
     
     
    "I could swear I saw four flashes, one on top of the first flash, one in between the first and second.," writes one commenter. "I see 3 flashes with and without sound. The first two are close together in distance and time and then comes the right one," says another.
     
     
    According to Caltech, this illusion proves that our senses can influence each other.
     
     
    "These illusions occur so quickly that they illustrate a phenomenon called postdiction (as opposed to prediction) in which a stimulus that occurs later can retroactively affect our perceptions of an earlier event," they write.
     
     
    South Asian Community Leaders Launch NO Campaign on Proportional Representation Referendum
     
     
    A number of respected and influential leaders in BC’s South Asian community have thrown their support behind the “NO” campaign when it comes to changing the voting system in our Province. 
     
     
    Dr. Gulzar Cheema, a former MLA in Manitoba and British Columbia and a practicing family doctor and Puneet Sandhar, a lawyer and a community advocate will be leading the South Asian campaign for the No BC Proportional Representation Society.
     
     
    They join former BC Attorney General Suzanne Anton, QC and Mr.Bill Tieleman, both directors of the No to BC Proportional Representation Society, to encourage voters to reject Proportional Representation in the referendum being held this month.
     
     
    "Proportional Representation has been proven to give extremist parties an easy access to power all over the world," said Sandhar. "These groups bring with them divisive politics that often target immigrants and minority groups. There is no place for that in BC, and that's why we must choose to continue with our current system that gives representation to people not power to extremists".   
     
     
    From October 22nd, voters started receiving a mail-in ballot on the future of our electoral system, asking whether they would like to keep the current First Past the Post system, or replace it with Proportional Representation. ProRep is a form of voting used in some countries including Sweden, where a recent election saw anti-immigrant, far-right extremists elected into government, where they now hold the balance of power.
     
     
    “Proportional Representation would see the loss of local MLAs around BC, a loss of accountability, & the rise of single issue and extremist parties.” said Cheema. “ProRep would end BC’s simple-to-understand voting system, a system which has led us to having one of the most stable & successful jurisdictions in the world”.
     
     
    To vote in the referendum, voters must be 18 years or older as of November 30th, 2018, a Canadian citizen and a BC resident for at least six months prior to November 30th, 2018. Voting packages need to be completed and returned by November 30th 2018.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    'Brexit 1.0' Happened 450,000 Years Ago

    'Brexit 1.0' Happened 450,000 Years Ago
    Scientists, including one of Indian origin, have found evidence of a 'geological Brexit' that happened about 450,000 years ago when ancient Britain separated from the rest of the Europe.

    'Brexit 1.0' Happened 450,000 Years Ago

    NASA's Peggy Whitson Record-breaking Space Mission Extended

    NASA's Peggy Whitson Record-breaking Space Mission Extended
    Peggy Whitson — who broke Indian-American astronaut Sunita Williams record for the most spacewalks by a woman — is poised to set a new record for cumulative time spent in space by a US astronaut, NASA said today.

    NASA's Peggy Whitson Record-breaking Space Mission Extended

    Geneva OKs Bare-Breasted Swimming For Women

    Geneva OKs Bare-Breasted Swimming For Women
    Geneva's regional council, modifying a ban that predated bikinis by decades, has ruled that women can again pop off their tops legally in Lake Geneva and Rhone River without running the risk of a fine.

    Geneva OKs Bare-Breasted Swimming For Women

    Video: Australian Cop Stops Press Conference To Make An Arrest

    Video: Australian Cop Stops Press Conference To Make An Arrest
    A man has learnt not to swear in front of police after he was swiftly arrested by a senior detective in the middle of a press conference.

    Video: Australian Cop Stops Press Conference To Make An Arrest

    Chinese Engineer Marries Robot After Failing To Find A Real Bride

    Chinese Engineer Marries Robot After Failing To Find A Real Bride
    Frustrated with the pressure of marriage, a 31-year-old Chinese engineer "married" a robot he created after failing to find a human bride. 

    Chinese Engineer Marries Robot After Failing To Find A Real Bride

    Muslim Student Writes 'BlackLivesMatter’ 100 Times, Gets Into Stanford

    Muslim Student Writes 'BlackLivesMatter’ 100 Times, Gets Into Stanford
      Ziad Ahmed said he was “stunned” when his innovative approach to the application process, which he described as “unapologetic activism”, paid off.

    Muslim Student Writes 'BlackLivesMatter’ 100 Times, Gets Into Stanford