Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
I'd like you to take a look around you
take in all the sights, the sounds,
if you're unlucky, the smells.
You feel like you're seeing the world
in all its completeness and detail,
you feel you're experiencing the world as it is
but that experience, as it turns out
is an illusion.
What you actually experience,
is what your mind and your brain give you,
it's an alternate reality.
Take a look at this image.
This is by Julian Beever
who is a Brittish artist.
Now, this is an illusion, this is a nice painting
of a swimming pool, it looks like it has depth,
looks like there's a woman sitting in the pool,
looks like Julian Beever up on the upper right
is dipping his foot into the pool,
and as he's doing this, you feel like
you are seeing the world as it is.
But of course it's not, it's chalk-art on a sidewalk,
it just gives the impression of depth.
And this is a double illusion.
Because as you're looking at this,
you feel like, "Okay, I'm seeing a painting
of chalk-art on a sidewalk."
But what you're actually seeing
is a really weird view of a chalk painting on a sidewalk.
You're seeing a chalk painting on a sidewalk
from the one view that gives you the impression of depth,
that gives you the impression that you're looking at a swimming pool.
And from any other perspective
it looks much more like this.
It's really substantially distorted.
The key is that we feel that we're seeing it
as it is, but we're actually not.
Let me give you another example:
this is from my colleague Burt Anderson,
what you see here are 2 sets of chess pieces;
the ones on the top look dark,
the ones of the bottom look light -- I'm sorry,
the ones on the top look light,
the ones on the bottom look dark.
And you can't help but see them that way
even though that's not at all what you're actually seeing.
Here is what you're actually seeing:
I'm just removing the background,
and when I remove the background,
you can see that both sets of pieces
are the same kind of moderate gray,
and every piece on the top is exactly the same
as the one directly below it.
Now that you know that, of course,
you'll be able to see them as they are,
when I show you the same image again, right?
Nope. Once you go back to the background
you can't help but see it as it isn't.
Your visual system is giving you the impression
that you're seeing light pieces and dark pieces
when you're actually seeing the same thing
in both cases.
What's happening here is that your visual system
is taking into account
not just the brightness of those individual pieces,
but the brightness of the surfaces
immediately around those pieces.
And it takes that into account in a way
that's actually really useful for us most of the time.
It gives us the ability to see a piece of paper
with black ink on it, the same inside
in a dark room and outside in a really bright light.
But it's not giving us the world exactly as it is
it's using a bag of tricks, it's using a set of shortcuts,
to give us the world as we need it.
Now, what makes visual illusions like this so cool?
Well, there are two reasons.
One is that it's surprising,
but that's not terribly satisfying,
the more interesting reason is that
it's giving us the impression that we're seeing
the world as it is.
And it's violating that impression,
it's breaking our intuition,
it's forcing us to confront the fact
that we aren't seeing the world as it actually is.
I'll give you another example of this:
this is from Bill Geisler and Jeffrey Perry.
This is a nice picture of flowers,
-- pleasant for today.
And I'll show you a bee, and I want you
to follow that bee around this image with your eyes,
so track the bee as it moves through the image.
It's supposed to kind of wonder around the image here,
and you're able to follow it just fine,
and eventually it's going to end up
back where it started.
And, we're back.
OK, now I want to show you exactly the same sequence,
except, this time, instead of tracking
that bee with your eyes,
I want you to maintain your focus,
maintain your gaze right on the bright yellow flower.
And notice what happens to that flower
as the bee gets farther and farther away;
it gets blurrier and blurrier.
It's exactly the same sequence,
you're seeing exactly the same thing you did the first time,
except that this time
you probably noticed that it's getting blurry,
whereas the first time you didn't notice
that anything was changing about the image at all.
Why is that?
The reason is that you're actually only taking in detail
from a tiny, tiny subset of your visual world
at any instant.
In fact, you're taking in detail from a subset
about the size of that bee.
You're taking in,
if you stick your arm out and put your thumb up,
you´re taking in high resolution information
only from the information about the width of your thumb.
Beyond that, it becomes progressively blurrier,
but we don't notice this at all.
Why not?
Well, we move our eyes 3-4 times a second
when we're looking at the world.
We don't realize we are doing that.
And everywhere we look, at that instant,
we're seeing everything in detail.
If something is our periphery and is potentially interesting,
we look over there and we see it in detail.
So we get the impression -- the false impression --
that we are seeing everything in detail.
Let's take a look at this issue: we asume
that everyone is seeing the world exactly as it is.
And this has profound implications
for how we think about the world around us.
Despite differences in our knowledge,
our beliefs, and expectations, we feel like
we are seeing the same thing as everybody else.
I've used visual illusions as a way of illustrating
how we don't see the world exactly as it is,
but these sorts of illusions are not just limited
to our visual system.
They are not just limited to our visual system,
they also affect the way we think,
the way we remember, the way we reason.
We think we see more than we do,
we think we see all of the detail around us; we don't.
But we also think we remember more than we do,
and that we know more than we do.
And these illusions lead to a really substantial problem.
They lead us to think that everybody
is seeing the same thing that we are.
Well, in reality,
two people looking at exactly the same world
could be taking in different information at the same time.
Now, what does that mean?
It means that anytime you have to communicate,
anytime you're trying to be a trainer or a CEO,
or a leader, or you're trying to lecture or teach,
you have to take into account
the fact that your knowledge, and your experience
as in what you see, are going to be different
from those of the people on your audience.
All of advertising depends on exactly that principle.
You have to know what your audience is going to see
in the advertisement.
Now, the problem is that we all share one thing,
even though we don't necessarily see the world the same,
we share this illusion
that we see the world the same as everybody else.
And only by testing your knowledge,
and testing what you're actually seeing,
just like you do with the visual illusion,
do you realize that you're not actually seeing the world
as everybody else is.
And, in fact, we don't all see the same thing.
Only by testing your knowledge,
can you see the world as it actually is.
(Applause)
Thank you.
(Applause)