Optical Illusion Lets You 'See' Your Brain Waves (PHOTO)

LOOK: See Your Brain Waves In This Optical Illusion
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Ever wonder what your brain waves look like?

Thanks to two innovative neuroscientists, you don't have to undergo an electroencephalogram to see your brain activity. As part of a study published this month in the Journal of Neuroscience, researchers in France created a new optical illusion to show viewers their brain waves.

The flickering wheel is a relatively simple illusion. Viewers focus on the black-and-white striped wheel and perceive a visual vibration at the center. (Try it out yourself. If you don't see a strobe-like flash emanating from the center, try focusing on another spot on the screen, so the wheel is in your peripheral vision.)

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As the authors explain in the published research, this slight flicker reflects the brain's alpha waves, which are present primarily during periods of deep relaxation.

Researchers monitored the frequency of flickers subjects perceived when they stared at the static wheel and compared that with each individual's alpha waves in resting state (with no visual stimulation), finding that the correlation between the two was significant.

While the neuroscientists concluded that looking at the flickering wheel -- and its afterimage -- allows viewers to experience their alpha activity, they did not specify whether the flicker is actually an alpha wave. As Discovery News writes, "[T]hey haven’t yet shown a ‘smoking gun’ which proves that the flicker really is alpha, as opposed to being something that happens to provoke alpha, and be of roughly alpha frequency."

The optical illusion is pretty cool, nonetheless.

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Before You Go

These Are Not GIFs
Acorn Craziness(01 of15)
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This optical illusion moves in waves as your eye traverses the image. (credit:Flickr: Roebot)
Modulated Diamond Field(02 of15)
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This optical illusion expands and contracts as your eye moves across the screen. (credit:OpticalIllusions.Blogspot)
Expanding Vortex(03 of15)
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This optical illusion expands and contracts as you focus on different areas of the image. (credit:OpticalIllusions4Kids.blogspot)
Zebra Roll(04 of15)
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Look closely. This wavy zebra-like pattern gives off the illusion of cylindrical turning. (credit:Eye-Illusions.com)
Psychedelic Color Vortex(05 of15)
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This psychedelic color vortex pulsates with a mighty illusoriness. (credit:Optical-Illusions.in)
Texture Zoom(06 of15)
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The sharp/fuzzy contrast creates an optical illusion that makes the circle's pattern move when you move your head closer to the image. (credit:ScienceBob.com)
The Rippling Eye(07 of15)
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This pattern -- which resembles an eye -- sends ripples moving outward from the center. (credit:Flickr: PowerPatrick)
Square Bulge(08 of15)
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This illusion gives off the sense of infinite expansion. (credit:flickr: StuckInAlabama2012)
Circular Gears(09 of15)
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These overlapping circles give off the impression of gear-like circular movement. Try to make the motion stop. (credit:Flickr: NightRStar)
Irregular Circular Vortex(10 of15)
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This vortex moves subtly as the eye travels across the image. (credit:Flickr: irargerich)
Parallel Lines?(11 of15)
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Are these lines parallel or curved? (credit:Flickr: PIzzoDisevo)
Black Dots(12 of15)
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Try and find the black dots. (credit:NIH.gov)
Dot Rotation(13 of15)
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The circle rotates as you move your head closer to the dot. (credit:NIH.gov)
Spinner(14 of15)
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Look at the columns closely. (credit:NIH.gov)
Grey Area(15 of15)
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Stare at the black dot long enough and watch the grey area disappear. (credit:NIH.gov)