What Causes the Illusion of Wheels Spinning Backwards?

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The discussion centers on the phenomenon of car wheels appearing to spin backward, both on television and in real life, due to a mismatch between visual perception and motion. Participants explore potential causes, including the effects of artificial light sources and the vibrations experienced in a moving vehicle. One theory suggests that the involuntary jiggling of the eyes, combined with external vibrations, may create a shutter-like effect that distorts perception. Additionally, there is speculation about the brain processing visual information in discrete time intervals, which could contribute to this illusion. The conversation highlights the complexity of visual perception and invites further exploration of the topic.
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I don't know if this is the right place to post this question, but you're a clever lot so I'm sure you'll know the answer.

We are all familiar with the illusion of the wheels on a car on television appearing to spin backwards when the car is traveling forward, this being caused by a mismatch of the picture frequency and the wheel's rotational speed.

However this phenomenon can also be observed in the real world, say, when you are looking at the wheel of the car beside you as you drive down the road.

Anyone know what causes this ?
 
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First, let's rule out artificial light sources. Was the light from streetlights a factor? That would cause the same shutter effect, even if it were only partially contributing to illumination.

I would secondly suspect the vibrations in your own car taking the role of "shutter".

Your eyes are continually jiggling - an involuntary reflex that your brain compensates for by subtracting this effect from the image. But if something provides an artificial jiggle, your brain can't manage to subtract the effect, and this will mimic a shutter - not enough to be noticeable, except under certain circumstances.

Try this: walk heavily in a room with a computer monitor. You may notice the screen going choppy briefly with each step. The quick vibration transmitted through your body by the impact with the ground jostles the image that your eye sees, briefly disrupting the otherwise smooth "movie" you see.

The walking thing is a real phenomenon, but I am only hypothesizing it as the expalnation of what you witnessed.
 
Sorry, I should have said that it was daylight with no artificial light.
I have experienced the effect you talk about but am not sure that it would be regular enough to explain what was the illusion of constant backward rotation.
I had wondered if the brain processes visual information in discreet time intervals (at a higher frequency than television ?) and so might be directly responsible ?
 
Thats a really interesting question. In my attempts to google for an answer, I came up with nothing. Perhaps you should post it to the Mind and Brain forum if no one here can answer it.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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