effect of illusion

  • 61Plasma effect — The plasma effect is a computer based visual effect animated in real time. It uses cycles of changing colours warped in various ways to give an illusion of liquid, organic movement.Plasma was probably invented by demo coders for use in their… …

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  • 62Coriolis effect (perception) — For the effect studied in physics, see Coriolis effect. In psychophysical perception, the Coriolis effect is the misperception of body orientation and induced nausea due to the Coriolis force (also referred to as the Coriolis… …

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  • 63Special effect — The illusions used in the film, television, theater, or entertainment industries to simulate the imagined events in a story are traditionally called special effects (a.k.a. SFX, SPFX, or simply FX).Special effects are traditionally divided into… …

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  • 64Touch illusion — Touch illusions are illusions that exploit the sense of touch. Some touch illusions require active touch (e.g., movement of the fingers or hands), whereas others can be evoked passively (e.g., with external stimuli that press against the… …

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  • 65Glissando illusion — The glissando illusion was first reported and demonstrated by Diana Deutsch in Musical Illusions and Paradoxes, 1995. An auditory illusion, it is created when a sound with a fixed pitch, such as a synthesized oboe tone, is played together with a… …

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  • 663D audio effect — 3D audio effects are a group of sound effects that attempt to widen the stereo image produced by two loudspeakers or stereo headphones, or to create the illusion of sound sources placed anywhere in 3 dimensional space, including behind, above or… …

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  • 67Ehrenstein illusion — The Ehrenstein illusion is an optical illusion studied by the German psychologist Walter Ehrenstein in which the sides of a square placed inside a pattern of concentric circles take an apparent curved shape. Ehrenstein… …

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  • 68windmill illusion —    Also known as kinetic depth effect. The term windmill illusion was introduced in or shortly before 1860 by the German army physician Wilhelm Joseph Sinsteden (1803 1891). It refers to the inability to identify the direction of rotation of the… …

    Dictionary of Hallucinations

  • 69runway-width illusion — A narrower than usual runway can create the illusion that the aircraft is at a higher altitude than it actually is. The pilot who does not recognize this illusion will fly a lower approach, with the risk of striking objects along the approach… …

    Aviation dictionary

  • 70somatogravic illusion — An optical illusion that can result in spatial disorientation. A rapid acceleration during takeoff can create an illusion of being in a nose up attitude. The disoriented pilot will push the aircraft into a nose low, or dive, attitude. A rapid… …

    Aviation dictionary