10 Amazing Tricks to Play with your Brain

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Mind is the aspect of intellect and consciousness experienced as combinations of thought, perception, memory, emotion, will and imagination, including all unconscious cognitive processes. Mind manifests itself subjectively as a stream of consciousness. Neuroanatomists usually consider the brain to be the pivotal unit of what we refer to as mind. The Human Brain tricks us whenever it can. You don’t actually see what it is in real or you don’t even actually hear or smell the way it should be. Here is the time to play trick with the human brain. I assure here, trying them is completely safe.

10. Ganzfeld Procedure

Ganzfeld Procedure

At first this might sound like a bad practical joke. Begin by tuning a radio to a station playing static. Then lie down on a couch and tape a pair of halved ping pong ballsover your eyes. Within minutes you should begin to experience a bizzare set of sensory distortions.

Some people see horses prancing in the clouds or hear the voice of a dead relative. It turns out that the mind is addicted to sensation so that when there’s little to sense (that’s the purpose of ping pong balls and static) your brain ends up inventing its own.

Source: (Link)

9. Shrink your Pain

Shrink your Pain

In case you experience an injury, then see the injured part with an inverted binoculars, soon your pain will seem to be decreasing in its magnitude.

Recently, a reasearch at Oxford University has lead to the discovery of a new pain killer – the inverted binoculars. The scientists demonstrated that the subjects who looked at their wounded hands through wrong end of the binoculars, making the hand appear smaller, experienced significantly less pain and decreased swelling. According to the researchers, this demonstrates that even basic bodily sensations such as pain are modulated by what we see. So next time if you stub your toe or cut a finger, do yourself a favour, look away!

Source: (Link)

8. Confuse your Proprioreception

Confuse your Proprioreception

This requires two chairs and a blind fold. The person wearing the blindfold should sit in the rear chair, staring at the back of the person sitting in the front. The blindfolded person then reach around and place his hand on the nose of the other person. At the same time he should place his other hand on his own nose and begin gently stroking both noses. After about 1 minute, more than 50% of the subjects report their nose as incredibly long. Therefore this is called Pinocchio’s Effect.

The Pinocchio effect  is an illusion that ones nose is growing longer, as happened to the literary character, Pinocchio when he told a lie. It is an illusion of proprioception, reviewed by Lackner (1988).

To explain the effect the other way, a vibrator is applied to the biceps tendon while one holds one’s nose with the hand of that arm. The vibrator stimulates muscle spindles in the biceps that would normally be stimulated by the muscle’s stretching, creating a kinesthetic illusion that the arm is moving away from the face. Because the fingers holding the nose are still giving tactile information of being in contact with the nose, it appears that the nose is moving away from the face too, in a form of perceptual capture. Similar phenomenon happens using the blindfolded method.

7. Confuse your Mindedness

Confuse your Mindedness

Lift your right foot a few inches from the floor and then begin to move it in a clockwise direction. While you’re doing this, use a finger your right index finger to draw a number 6 in the air. Your foot will turn in an anticlockwise direction and there’s nothing you can do about it!

The left side of your brain, which controls the right side of your body, is responsible for rhythm and timing. The left side of your brain cannot deal with operating two opposite movements at the same time and so it combines them into a single motion.

Source: (Link)

6. Confuse your Hearing

Confuse your Hearing

This can be performed with three people, one being subject and other two objects/ observers and we also need a headset connected to routine plastic pipes on the either side. Ask the subject to sit on a chair equidisant between you and the second observer. Now each one of you hold the pipes from the headset on the corresponding sides and one by one speak into the pipes. The subject will rightly tell the direction of the sound. Now exchange the pipes and repeat voicing into the pipes. The subject’s brain will get confused and he’ll point in the opposite direction of sound.

Sound localization is a listener’s ability to identify the location or origin of a detected sound in direction and distance or the methods in acoustical engineering to simulate the placement of an auditory cue in a virtual 3D space. The human auditory system has only limited possibilities to determine the distance of a sound source, mainly based on inter-aural time differences, exchanging the pipes would cause perception by the opposite sided neurons in the brain only and thus the subject will not be able to localize the sound.

5. Confuse your Depth Perception

Confuse your Depth Perception

Depth perception is the visual ability to perceive the world in three dimensions (3D). Looking at a sight that you have not seen before or entering into a 3d cinema with one eyes closed will alter the way your mind perceives things.


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This would not happen for most already seen things because your brain is tuned to judge the time and space accurately. However, your brain will not be able to fill the gap if you use one eye. Depth perception arises from a variety of depth cues. These are typically classified into binocular cues that require input from both eyes and monocular cues that require the input from just one eye. Binocular cues include stereopsis, yielding depth from binocular vision through exploitation of parallax. Since (by definition), binocular depth perception requires two functioning eyes, a person with only one functioning eye has no binocular depth perception. And hence stepping into a 3d cinema will not be an amazing phenomenon as it used to be. This is more so in people who are blinded with one eye by birth.

4. Feel a Phantom Sensation

Phantom sensations are described as perceptions that an individual experiences relating to a limb or an organ that is not physically part of the body. Sensations are recorded most frequently following the amputation of an arm or a leg, but may also occur following the removal of a breast or an internal organ.

3. 18000 Hz Sine Wave

18000 Hz Sine Wave

Download Wave Here: 18000Hz Sinewave (under 20s)

Try hearing this sound. It is called “under 20s” sound as the elder’s can’t perceive it. It is a sine wave at 18,000 Hz (by comparison, a dog whistle sounds at 16,000 – 22,000 HZ – meaning a dog can hear this sound as well). This sound is used by some teenagers as a ring tone on their cellphone so that only they (and others of their age group ofcourse) can tell when the phone is ringing. It is also occasionally used in England to play very loud in areas that authorities don’t want teens to congregate in, as the noise annoys them.

The inner ear of the humans have a functional design to hear sounds in a range of a frequency. Hearing is not merely a function of ears but the oscillation amplitude is conducted to the brain. As people get older they lose the ability to hear higher pitched sounds. As people get older they lose the ability to hear higher pitched sounds – that is the reason that only young people can hear this sound – it is too high for most people over the age of 20.

2. Confuse your photoreception

Confuse your photoreception

Stare at the central point (plus sign) of the black and white picture for atleast 30 seconds and then look at a wall near you, you will see a bright spot, twinkle a few times, what do you see? or even who do you see?

Stare at the eye of the red parrot while you slowly count to 20, then immediately look at one spot in the empty birdcage. The faint, ghostly image of a blue-green bird should appear in the cage. Try the same thing with the green cardinal, and a faint magenta bird should appear.

When an image is looked at for a length of time (usually around 30 seconds) and then replaced with a white field, one type pf an effect called an afterimage can be seen. The common explanation given for an afterimage is that the photoreceptors (rods and cones) in the eye become “fatigued”, and do not work as well as the those photoreceptors that were not affected (the “fatigue” is actually caused by the temporary bleaching of the light sensitive pigments contained within the photoreceptors) This results in the information that is provided by the photoreceptors not being in balance, causing the afterimages to appear. As the photoreceptors become less “fatigued”, which takes between ten and thirty seconds, the balance is recovered, resulting in the afterimage disappearing.

Source: (Link)

Now do another trick to confuse your photoreceptors. This will temporarily blind you from one eye (for around 30 seconds and don’t worry it is of no harm) Go into a room, shut the door and turn out the lights so that the room is mostly dark. Wait until your eyes adapt to the darkness. You should be able to make out the basic shapes of the room from the tiny bit of light coming in from under the door. Next, close your right eye and cover it with your hand. Turn the light on, keeping your eye closed and covered. Leave the light on for about a minute or until your left eye has adapted to the light. Uncover your eye and look around the darkened room.

What do you see? What you might experience is an illusion discovered by researcher Uta Wolfe in which it seems that your left eye is closed, even though it is open.

The explaination to this is the visual cycle that takes time to be adapted, when it is not adapted as for the left eye, the eye will send wrong signals to the brain thus image would be darkened for the left eye until it adapts.

1. Confuse your Cognition

Confuse your Cognition

Take a look at the spinning girl. Do you see it spinning clockwise or counter-clockwise? I see it spinning counter-clockwise, but i was able to switch it in the other direction, its hard for many people. Give it a try.

The spinning girl is a form of the more general spinning silhouette illusion. The image is not objectively “spinning” in one direction or the other. It is a two-dimensional image that is simply shifting back and forth. But our brains did not evolve to interpret two-dimensional representations of the world but the actual three-dimensional world. So our visual processing assumes we are looking at a 3-D image and is uses clues to interpret it as such. Or, without adequate clues it may just arbitrarily decide a best fit – spinning clockwise or counterclockwise. And once this fit is chosen, the illusion is complete – we see a 3-D spinning image.

By looking around the image, focusing on the shadow or some other part, you may force your visual system to reconstruct the image and it may choose the opposite direction, and suddenly the image will spin in the opposite direction.

Source: (Link)

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Comments (213)

 

  1. Id totally do that naked lady at #1

  2. Dave says:

    Very cool, i’m gonna try a few of these!

    • Erwin says:

      Try to read this correctly
      Write this down on a piece of paper or in microsoft word:
      Green in the color red or yellow
      Red in the color green or blue
      Blue in either yellow or orange
      You get the picture eg write the name of the color in a
      different color and try not to make any mistakes
      Happy reading

  3. Oscar says:

    I used to have that under 20 sound thing as my ringtone in high school. Now im 21 and i cant hear it =|

  4. deni says:

    Wonders if #8 works with * (not that I’m touching anyone’s though)

  5. Dudy says:

    For the spining girl. To switch from clockwise to the oposit, u have to focus on the leg and if you think its the left leg, it will turn to a way, but if you think it’s the right leg, it will just switch to the other direction.

    This is the trick. 2 min to unerstand this.
    With practice, you can make her switch then switch again, forever. so you’ll not see her spin anymore :-p

  6. Nick says:

    The dancer for #1. At first I could only imagine CCW, and then when i read for 3 seconds and looked back it was CW. So I sat here staring at it, and I can now change it whichever way I want at any time I want. It really messed with my perception for a couple minutes.

  7. Magitrek says:

    There’s rick astley everywhere I look x.x

  8. steve says:

    Other one for the dancer is focus or defocus your eyes.

    Also binaural frequencies are a nice trick to play with the brain.

    Thanks for the post

  9. Adam says:

    The trick to the spinning girl is to watch the shadow that the front foot produces. When the shadow is visible she will turn <<>> you can make her turn right to left and never spin.

  10. Irving says:

    I’m 67 years old, and I can hear the 18khz tone. Had to turn the volume up to a setting which, if normal music, would have been rather too loud, and I heard a faint high whining sound.

    • Howdy says:

      Thats probably static from your speakers grandpa.

      • Zang says:

        Incorrect, I can confirm this, same sound I downloaded, used an amplifier and heard, but at lower sound levels my brothers and sister heard, and they got annoyed when put loud as said it was TOO loud.

        Also sound range might be limited but not the frequencies, we can hear them all, just at different volumes as the older we are we lose the ability to hear the lower volume of that spectrum.

  11. Timmy says:

    Ooohhh this is cool :-D

  12. Jocelyn says:

    The spinning dancer one is AWESOME!

  13. ry X says:

    great thoughts

  14. Solar says:

    That’s a WOW! It’s really funny to play with own brain! Mind games; fooling the brain.

  15. [...] ve o tamamını kullanamadığımız beynimize kullanabildiğimiz kısmıyla oyunlar oynayalım. Smashinglists adlı sitede gördüğüm 10 maddelik bir liste [...]

  16. Nick says:

    Very interesting, I found a couple of the exercises quite surreal!

  17. Laughing at Desperate says:

    I was able to do what #7 said I could not and I do not play music or practice karate. I am 26 with rock, punk, and rave concerts in my past as well as having been a dancer(exotic) and I could hear the htz with my volume lower than norm. The girl is a flipping gif just like stated in the posting. I can make her go either way w/out much focus.

    I think this is fun and informative.

    That being said, I believe pic 7 and pic 1 are unecessary and show this is a site designed by a person focused on sex, whether they realize it or not, male or female, doesnt matter.

    I am a very sexually open person but I am also a mother and appreciate sexuality in its appropriate exposure. This is not a pornographic site, it is an informative and actually somewhat educational one, so, why the lude sexuality???

    Save it for yourself and we will go get it if we want it.

  18. Rajesh Kumar says:

    The spinning lady was great.

  19. Liziiiiiiiiii says:

    Number 1 (the spinning lady) was the oddest thing. At first it took me about 2 minutes to make her change direction. Then it became quicker and i was able to make her change direction within a few seconds of wanting her too. That worked for about 5 minutes and got easier and easier each time i did so.
    Then suddenly i lost control of her and she kept changing direction every few seconds when i tried to keep her going in one direction and i felt like she/it was disobeying me. Very very odd…

  20. ARGH says:

    Ok I’m 23 so I assumed I wouldn’t be able to hear it and so I put my ears near my laptop… but then I did hear it. AND IT WAS HORRIBLE. PAINFUL, even. It stunned me and made me jump backwards, why would anyone ever want to be able to hear it?? Never doing that again!!

  21. Kristal says:

    Hahahaha ok I hate that sound so much, it’s like the sound that the TV makes when it gets turned on.

    I can do that spin foot and draw a 6 thing :s but I guess it’s more like tricking rather than really doing it? I dont know, I just concentrate on my foot spinning and randomly draw the 6 without focusing on it too much lol I’m a little nervous to try that dark room one XD

  22. Mike says:

    To make the girl change directions, cover her whole body except the tip of her head. Then picture spinning the way u want and remove ur hand. Voilà!

  23. Johnny says:

    The checkered one with the green and yellow circles spin when i look at em super trippy….. girl spins clockwise for me too

  24. Ray says:

    Wow on the spinning girl i found a way to break the illusion (atleast for me). I look away from the screen but still see the spinning girl ( note that you should no way focus on her) then i imagine her spinning the other way and with a bit of luck before she does a half turn i magine her sping back the way she was spinning before and suddenly i notcied that she wasnt spinning at all but going back and forth but when i focused on the movent the illusion came back and she started spinning. And in the high pitched tone one where u must hear the high sounds, for me the sound keeps coming and going…… Fun tricks on this site xD…..

  25. cristina says:

    hey, i`m 34 years old and i can hear the sound loud and clear. Ouch!

  26. top ten lists says:

    I liked #3 the sound wave one really amazing and nice option for teenagers.

  27. José says:

    Hi,

    These are awesome.
    If I had them, I’d like to try the one of the ping pong balls and radio.
    The one with the face on the wall is similar to that old one with Jesus.

    José

  28. maianhvk says:

    about number 1 silhouette, i see it spins in both ways :) and the face on the wall, i dont like Archuleta but i must admit it looks really like him!

    I like your posts :)

  29. V. says:

    Okay, I’m sure it’s not all that norm. for #10 to be scary, but I’ve tried something similar before… Scary pictures and sounds present themselves…….. Maybe I just watch too many scary movies?

  30. dd says:

    1. Find a very smooth/glossy surface. (e.g. a new school desk)
    2. Get an A4 sheet of paper.
    3. Find someone and blindfold them.
    4. Put the sheet of paper on the surface.
    5. Place the blindfolded person’s pointing finger on the sheet.
    6. Tell them that the desk is covered with oil and tell them to move around their finger along the desk.
    They will be surprised when they take off their blindfold! :P

  31. Katherine says:

    i’m 18 and i can’t hear that sound! :|

  32. Joe says:

    I can still hear that “under 20″ sound and I’m 26. I have a friend my age who can hear it, and she teaches High school. She can hear her students using the ringtone, but the other teachers can’t.

    The spinning illusion I can get to go both ways, but the shadow I can only see going counterclockwise. So it gets weird for me when I see the image go one way, but the shadow rotates in the opposite way.

  33. Erik Andersson says:

    About nr.7:

    It is possible to do it if you do the rotation with the foot w/o lifting it. At least i could.

  34. Jared Bond says:

    I see lots of people figured out tricks to consistently switch the spinning girl on command… Here’s mine:

    Focus on the central foot. If you imagine you’re seeing either the top or the bottom view of the foot, the rotation will switch. Problem solve!

  35. Angeline Deadwood says:

    nooooooooooooo i got rickrolled by an ILLUSION!!! :(

  36. Shaiyan Chowdhury says:

    Really g888!!!! want some more….

  37. EmmieK says:

    I loved this post!
    Could anyone else see the dancer animation just shift from side to side without actually turning? At first I saw it going clockwise then with concentration counter-clockwise, then by the end of looking at it for a fair while I could just see her leg swaying from side to side not actually turning.
    Also With the the Man in the photo of the second one: Photoreception, I could see his image for ages afterwards. Could anyone else.

    Lol Lots of fun please keep updating. :)

  38. klaudyuxxx says:

    #1 it’s annoying. I can only see it CW

  39. broom broom says:

    the sound one is weird i haven’t heard it yet and i’m 143 years old

  40. Bob Bobson says:

    Most people don’t need to go to the lengths described to experience the Ganzfeld effect. Next time you are in bed at night, if the room is dark (turn off whatever lights you can), and there is no noise (ie nobody watching loud TV downstairs or sirens and junk outside), then you will experience it after a minute or two.

    Basically what is happening is that by laying in bed, still awake, in a dark and quiet room, you are in a sensory deprivation state and your brain will start to reproduce sounds that you have heard that day.

    One thing you will probably hear is people calling your name, especially if it’s the elongated, whiny call of parents or kids. Another common thing you’ll hear is a song that you heard several times that day.

    What’s really strange is that these noises will get quite loud after a while to the point of almost becoming a deafening din. However even the smallest actual noise in the real world (even your own breathing/snoring) can break the cacophony and suddenly snap you back to reality and the complete silence.

    It’s a pretty weird feeling.

  41. Nana says:

    I am 29 and I can hear the sound :) . My dog also did he was sleeping but when I turned the player on he jumped so high and started looking at the screen trying to figure out where it was coming from

  42. Great tricks for the brain – so much so that you begin to wonder what reality really is!

  43. G says:

    Am I the only one who saw Ted Bundy with #2???! That was so creepy!!!

  44. [...] actually see what it is in real or you don’t even actually hear or smell the way it should be. Here is the time to play trick with the human [...]

  45. Ronda says:

    I’m 44 years old and I downloaded the MP3 file that is supposed to be a sound only those under 20 years old can hear.

    Well, I can hear it. Why?

  46. Dude says:

    I’m in my early 30s and I can hear that sound very easily. Maybe its just my speakers. And I didn’t have to turn it up to hear it. Is it different for others?

  47. Gumby says:

    Ronda you must have some really good high fidelity speakers :) As for number 8, I tried that with my room mate and she was as skeptical as hell, but I convinced her to later do the same with nipples instead of noses. Man was that a treat!

  48. Jhayke says:

    These are cool :)

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