- 
                                            
                                                About
                                                Our Storyback- Our Mission
- Our Leadershio
- Accessibility
- Careers
- Diversity, Equity, Inclusion
- Learning Science
- Sustainability
 Our Solutionsback
- 
                                            
                                                Community
                                                Communityback-   Newsroom  
 
-   Webinars on Demand  
 
-   Digital Community  
 
-   The Institute at Macmillan Learning  
 
-   English Community  
 
-   Psychology Community  
 
-   History Community  
 
-   Communication Community  
 
-   College Success Community  
 
-   Economics Community  
 
-   Institutional Solutions Community  
 
-   Nutrition Community  
 
-   Lab Solutions Community  
 
-   STEM Community  
 
 
-   Newsroom  
What makes these legs so shiny?
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Mark as New
- Mark as Read
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Printer Friendly Page
- Report Inappropriate Content
Open your discussion of sensation and perception by showing students this image. Note the white on the clear bulb where the light is reflecting. Our eyes detect white, but our brains know that those white spots aren’t really white. Based on past experience, our brain perceives the white as merely reflections of light.
Image source: https://www.pexels.com/photo/clear-glass-light-bulb-75427
Next, show students this photo.
Image source: http://cheezburger.com/8985651968/shiny-legs-optical-illusion-paint-whats-making-these-legs-look-so-...
It’s not quite The Dress, but this is still pretty cool. Like many people, what you see are shiny legs. Do they look like they are covered in a hard, clear plastic?
But what if I told you that there is no plastic. It’s just strategically placed white paint?
If you saw shiny legs, you were perceiving the white as reflected light, as you rightly did with the light bulb. Once you’re told the white is paint, the shininess disappears, and you are just left with, well, white paint.
- 
				
					
						Abnormal Psychology5 
- 
				
					
						Achievement2 
- 
				
					
						Affiliation1 
- 
				
					
						Cognition9 
- 
				
					
						Consciousness13 
- 
				
					
						Current Events6 
- 
				
					
						Development Psychology9 
- 
				
					
						Developmental Psychology12 
- 
				
					
						Drugs4 
- 
				
					
						Emotion19 
- 
				
					
						Evolution1 
- 
				
					
						Gender4 
- 
				
					
						Gender and Sexuality3 
- 
				
					
						Genetics2 
- 
				
					
						History and System of Psychology4 
- 
				
					
						History and Systems of Psychology2 
- 
				
					
						Industrial and Organizational Psychology15 
- 
				
					
						Intelligence1 
- 
				
					
						Learning26 
- 
				
					
						Memory10 
- 
				
					
						Motivation4 
- 
				
					
						Motivation: Hunger1 
- 
				
					
						Nature-Nurture2 
- 
				
					
						Neuroscience15 
- 
				
					
						Personality11 
- 
				
					
						Psychological Disorders and Their Treatment9 
- 
				
					
						Research Methods and Statistics41 
- 
				
					
						Sensation and Perception15 
- 
				
					
						Social Psychology45 
- 
				
					
						Stress and Health5 
- 
				
					
						Teaching and Learning Best Practices30 
- 
				
					
						Thinking and Language9 
- 
				
					
						Virtual Learning7 
- « Previous
- Next »
