So the brain tries its hardest to try to mix all of these senses together into what it thinks is the same event. One of the more famous illusions is the rubber hand illusion. Stare at a realistic rubber hand, and have someone touch IT - and your own hand - at the same time.
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Another way your brain tries to blend vision and feel together is the size-weight and material-weight illusions. Basically, if a larger object weighs the same as a smaller object, the larger (less dense) object also *feels lighter*. As long as you get to look at it first.
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Remember, the two objects weigh the same. And you can lift them the same way - by a handle on a string, say - and the bigger looking one still FEELS lighter.
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Other bullshit insane effects include: - Lighter color feels lighter - More metallic feels lighter - Colder feels heavierhttps://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00221-014-3926-9 …
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A lot of this is from how the brain weighs (heh) prior experience. A lot of work has been done in trying to figure out how experience is used - but the short story is that through extensive training you can be tricked into thinking the reverse too, that smaller feels heavier.
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Many aspects of vision, yes. The Argus II retinal implant was only 9x6 IIRC. But, unfortunately not enough by far for independence from caretakers.
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Čini se da učitavanje traje već neko vrijeme.
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