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Optical illusion photograph goes viral: Can you see black and white or colour?

A clever optical illusion is doing the rounds online today.

The series of images, shared by Lionel Page, an economist at UTC Economics, and created by software developer and digital media artist, Øyvind Kolås, have been doing the rounds on Twitter due to their ‘colour assimilation grid’ illusion.

The photographs appear to be in colour but they’re actually black and white images.

Kolås explains on his website that the images are a visual experiment that use “very-saturated coloured grids overlayed on a grayscale image.”

These cause the grayscale cells to be perceived as having colour, he adds.

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Can you believe this photograph is actually in black and white? [Photo: Øyvind Kolås]
Can you believe this photograph is actually in black and white? [Photo: Øyvind Kolås]
What colours can you see in this image? [Photo: Øyvind Kolås]
What colours can you see in this image? [Photo: Øyvind Kolås]
The digital media artist also created the image using dots [Photo: Øyvind Kolås]
The digital media artist also created the image using dots [Photo: Øyvind Kolås]

The incredible technique is similar to the way that printers use colours: the colour mix is seen by the eye and interpreted by our brains to create the final image.

The image has garnered attention as we all see colour differently.

According to Pantone, the human eye and brain work hand-in-hand to translate light into colour.

Objects have colours because they reflect these particular wavelengths of light while absorbing other wavelengths.

For instance, the colour red is not ‘in’ an apple. The surface of the fruit reflects the wavelengths we perceive as red and absorbs the rest.

These wavelengths then travel to the eye using photoreceptor cells known as rods and cones.

There are 120 million rods which detect mainly black and white information while approximately seven million cones detect different wavelengths of light roughly corresponding to green, red and blue.

We see colour because the brain pieces together all of the information collected by the rods and cones - often filling in “missing” parts in order to understand our surroundings.

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