36
DISAPPEARING DOTS
LENS
RETINA
LIGHT
OPTIC
NERVE
P H OTO R E C E P TO R
CELLS
SCIENCE
PART...
THE
This is all about your blind spot,
a point in your eye where you
literally cannot see.
When light enters your eyes, it hits a thin
layer at the back called the retina. This
contains special cells called photoreceptors
that convert the light into electrical signals.
These are sent to your brain, where they are
processed into images. The electric signals
travel along tiny, wire-like nerves that come together
in a bundle called the optic nerve. Since there is no
space for photoreceptors at the head of this nerve,
you’re blind in that spot. Our clever brains fill in
the gap at this point based on what it sees around
it, which in the case of our tricks are the white
and green backgrounds.
Close your right eye. Hold
this image of a dot and an x
about 12 in (30 cm) from your
face. Look at the x. You will
also see the dot in the corner
of your vision.
1
Slowly move
the page closer
to your face. The
dot will suddenly
disappear.
2
BLIND
SPOT
WHERE HAS TH
E DOT GONE?!
US_036-037_Disappearing_dots.indd 36 14/09/2018 09:14