Search Results


Showing results 1 to 20 of 21

Source Institutions
Add to list Details
Create 3D glasses and use them to explore color, light and optics. Fool your brain into 'seeing' three dimensions on a flat surface!

1 cent - $1 per student Ages 6 - 18 10 to 30 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
In this activity, learners create a simple “top” from a CD, marble and bottle cap, and use it as a spinning platform for a variety of illusion-generating patterns.

$1 - $5 per student Ages 8 - 18 10 to 30 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
Experience a spinning spiral...you won't be hypnotized, but you'll see what happens when you look away. It's like getting off a merry-go-round and everything keeps moving.

1 cent - $1 per student Ages 6 - adult Under 5 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
In this activity about depth perception, learners create an optical illusion in a shoe box.

$1 - $5 per student Ages 6 - 18 10 to 30 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
In this activity, learners discover a brain process called habituation.

free Ages 6 - 18 10 to 30 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
Do you have a hard time matching paint swatches with your furniture? When you consider human perception, color is context dependent.

1 cent - $1 per student Ages 4 - adult 5 to 10 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
In this lab (Activity #1 on page), learners explore how we see color.

$1 - $5 per group Ages 8 - 18 45 to 60 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
In this activity about light and perception, learners discover how a flash of light can create a lingering image called an "afterimage" on the retina of the eye.

1 cent - $1 per student Ages 8 - 18 10 to 30 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
We don't normally view people upside down and so our brains aren't accustomed to it.

free Ages 4 - 18 Under 5 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
This science activity demonstrates the dominant eye phenomena. What does your brain do when it sees two images that conflict?

1 cent - $1 per student Ages 4 - adult Under 5 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
In this activity, learners discover that it is difficult to trace a curve by using its reflection in a mirror. Use this activity to discuss how the brain works.

1 cent - $1 per student Ages 6 - 18 5 to 10 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
How can you make one shade of gray look like two? By putting it against two different color backgrounds! This activity allows learners to perform this sleight of hand very easily.

$1 - $5 per student Ages 8 - 18 30 to 45 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
In this activity, learners control the (apparent) size of a hole with their brain.

1 cent - $1 per student Ages 11 - 18 5 to 10 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
In this fun optics activity, learners explore principles of light, reflection (mirrors), and perception. Learners work in pairs and sit on opposite sides of a "two-way" mirror.

Over $20 per group Ages 6 - 18 10 to 30 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
This mirror-tracing activity related to proprioception is a visual and motor test that involves learning a new motor skill.

1 cent - $1 per student Ages 11 - 18 1 to 7 days
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
In this activity, learners use a simple trick of perspective to dress friends in tiny cutout clothing. Learners make tiny pants out of card stock and tape them to the end of a stick.

1 cent - $1 per group Ages 6 - 18 5 to 10 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
In this activity, learners will make a thaumatrope, an old-fashioned optical illusion that dates back to the 1820s.

1 cent - $1 per student Ages 6 - adult 10 to 30 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
Learners will explore the concept of angular distance, and investigate why the moon appears to be the same size as the sun during a solar eclipse, despite the sun being much larger.

1 cent - $1 per group Ages 6 - adult 5 to 10 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
This is an online exhibit about color perception. Learners set a random background color and then try to mix red, blue, and green light to match.

free Ages 6 - 18 5 to 10 minutes
Source Institutions
Add to list Details
In this optics activity, learners discover that not all shadows are black. Learners explore human color perception by using colored lights to make additive color mixtures.

$5 - $10 per group Ages 6 - 18 5 to 10 minutes