🐍 The Rotating Snakes
Look at any area—peripheral regions will appear to rotate! Move your eyes around to enhance the effect.
These images are completely static—yet they appear to ROTATE! Akiyoshi Kitaoka's famous "Rotating Snakes" illusion exploits asymmetric luminance gradients that fool your brain's motion detectors. The effect is strongest in your peripheral vision— look slightly away and watch the patterns come alive!
Look at any area—peripheral regions will appear to rotate! Move your eyes around to enhance the effect.
Your visual cortex contains motion energy detectors—neurons that respond to specific spatial-temporal patterns. The Peripheral Drift Illusion exploits these detectors using a clever 4-step luminance gradient:
The key is asymmetric steps: Black→Blue (small step) followed by Blue→White (large step), then White→Yellow (small) and Yellow→Black (large). This pattern mimics the spatiotemporal signature of actual motion!
Kitaoka created dozens of variations. Click any variant to load it:
Fun fact: Kitaoka's original "Rotating Snakes" image from 2003 became one of the most shared optical illusions on the internet, inspiring countless variations and scientific studies.
Fraser-Wilcox Effect (1979): The illusion is based on the observation that asymmetric luminance profiles create illusory motion. Kitaoka refined this into the "optimized" 4-color sequence.
Why Peripheral? Peripheral vision has higher motion sensitivity but lower spatial resolution. It detects the motion energy signal but can't resolve the details that would reveal the image is static.
Motion Energy Model: Adelson & Bergen (1985) showed that motion detection involves oriented spatiotemporal filters. The 4-color gradient produces non-zero motion energy even in a static image!