According to Mother Nature Network, the "motion" is created by the positioning of the shapes and contrasting colors.
According to the BBC, our retina is receiving so much at once that our brain gets confused and is fooled into thinking movement is occurring when in actual fact it isn't.
Quick! What animal do you see here? A butterfly, or a collection of snakes? Actually this is an Atlas moth which, according to The Telegraph, uses the ends of its snake-patterned wings to scare off predators. To complete the illusion, the moth falls to the ground and withers around...just like a real snake!
The top line appears longer, right? Wrong. Both lines are exactly the same length. One theory is that our brain is interpreting the arrowheads as corners, which helps us determine depth and distance, as explained by New World Encyclopedia.
If you see a triangle, your eyes are again playing tricks on you. This is an example of the "phantom edge phenomena," which neuropsychologists call the "T-effect." As noted in New World Encyclopedia, neural cells recognize breaks between shapes and will assume there is in fact a line creating a shape that doesn't actually exist.
This geometrical-optical illusion also confuses the brain. The red lines appear to bow outwards and the blue lines inwards. But again, they all are parallel to one another.
This example gives the impression of an endless plunge through an infinite spiral. Not at all! It's just a series of concentric circles. According to Illusion Works, the illusion plays on the orientation-sensitive simple cells and simple image processing occurring at the retina.
MIT Professor of Vision Science Edward H. Adelson created this optical illusion in which the two boxes marked with an 'x' seem to be two completely different shades, but in reality, are exactly the same in color. The brain uses relative color and shading to determine the color of things found all around us, according to All That's Interesting.
And in this creative image, Chinese artist Liu Bolin "vanishes" as he blends himself into a comic book stand. He actually uses paint on himself to brilliant camouflage effect.
See also: Highway to hell: Spooky stories set along Route 66
We use our vision every day. But can we always trust what we see? These incredible optical illusions will have you rubbing your eyes and second-guessing yourself! Click through this gallery and take a look at these mind-boggling images.
Optical illusions that will make you question what you're seeing
Could it be that your eyes are tricking you?
LIFESTYLE Tricks
We use our vision every day. But can we always trust what we see? These incredible optical illusions will have you rubbing your eyes and second-guessing yourself! Click through this gallery and take a look at these mind-boggling images.