Gallery: These Optical Illusions Trick Your Brain With Science
Clive Gifford01Eye-Benders-Shutterstock1
The combination of patterns and colors trick your brain into thinking this still psychedelic swirl is actually moving.
Clive Gifford02Eye-Benders-Shutterstock2
Your eyes are constantly scanning an image, "like a twitchy digital camera continually autofocusing and adjusting the eye’s lens," Gifford [writes in the Guardian](http://www.theguardian.com/childrens-books-site/gallery/2014/nov/17/best-optical-illusions-ever-clive-gifford-eye-benders). This is at least partly responsible for illusions that appear to move, like these wheels.
Roger Newland Shepard03Eye-Benders-Roger-Shepard
Images like this elephant, cheekily titled "L'egs-istential Quandary," mess with the brain's skill at detecting patterns and filling visual gaps.
Clive Gifford04Eye-Benders
In order to explain how illusions work, Gifford provides a primer on the brain's regions.
05K-EYEB Optical
Each orange circle is the same size, but the blue circles trick the part of your brain that measures perspective and scale.
Clive Gifford06cross
The pink and red squares are actually the exact same color. The colored squares surrounding the "pink" and "red" squares your brain into seeing them as different.
Clive Gifford07Eye-Benders-Lotto-Lab
Count the number of colors on this cube. See seven? Wrong. The central orange square on the front, and the central brown square on the top are actually the same color.
Clive Gifford08Eye-Benders-Shutterstock
This zen image tricks your brain's pattern-seeking bias to evoke leaves blowing in a breeze.
Clive Gifford09Schräge Parallelen
The offset blue boxes trick your brain into seeing convergent red lines. In fact, all the lines are parallel.
Clive Gifford10K-EYEB Optical
The Herman Grid is one of the most famous optical illusions. In theory, it works because it tricks the neural process that helps us tell different colors apart.
What’s Worse Than Romance Scams? Adoption Scams
This week in WIRED Book Club, we recap the final chapters of The Yahoo Boys.
Kate Knibbs
Beatbot’s New Pool Robot Cleans Itself (Mostly)
The AquaSense X brings self-cleaning technology to pool robots for the first time, but is it worth nearly twice the price of Beatbot’s flagship cleaner?
Christopher Null
Skylight’s Touchscreen Calendar Got my Whole Family on the Same Page
The Skylight has become the informational and organizational hub of my household. My touchscreen-native kids have also gained more agency over our family activities.
Jaclyn Greenberg
The Samsung Micro RGB R95H Is a Good, Not Great TV
There’s a new fleet of TVs using new mini and micro RBG display tech, and Samsung’s R95H model isn’t as impressive as it should be.
John Brandon
AI Found a Root Bug in Linux That Everyone Missed for 15 Years
Plus: The Pentagon is training amateurs to become part of its hacker army, a Flock license plate reader error led to cops surrounding a car reviewer, and more.
Dell Cameron
We Make Lovely Home-Cooked Meals for Ourselves. Why Not Do the Same for Our Dogs?
More dog owners have begun cooking for their canine companions in recent years. When my own dog fell ill, I became part of this growing group.
Alicia Kennedy
The Best Hiking Boots and Shoes for Any Adventure
From strenuous hikes and serious summits to weekend rambles in the park, these boots help you make the most of your time outdoors.
Chris Haslam
China’s Tianwen-2 Space Probe Has Rendezvoused With Earth’s Quasi-Moon
The probe sent back the first pictures of the asteroid Kamo’oalewa. Next step: landing on the surface and collecting samples to send back to Earth.
Ritsuko Kawai
El Niño Is Already Wreaking Havoc on Pacific Fisheries
As the climate phenomenon sends warm water surging across the eastern Pacific, some parts of the fishing industry are suffering—but other regions are seeing a windfall.
Joseph Winters
Exclusive: How Jay-Z Pulled Off a Surprise-Filled Show During New York’s Wildest Summer
Summer 2026 marks the 30th anniversary of Jay-Z’s debut Reasonable Doubt. To honor it, he put on a massive concert at Yankee Stadium—complete with performances from Beyoncé, Nas, and Alicia Keys.
Angela Watercutter
OpenAI’s Head of Safety Is Leaving the Company
Johannes Heidecke’s departure comes as OpenAI tries to further integrate its research and safety teams.
Maxwell Zeff
Microsoft Reports a Massive 25 Percent Jump in Emissions
Data centers are driving up the company’s use of electricity—and carbon pollution.
Molly Taft