A new study from the Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience shows how flickering light can cause hallucinations in our brain: ...
A new study reveals how flickering lights can trigger hallucinations by causing standing waves in the brain's visual cortex.
This is [Michael Ossmann’s] RGB LED stroboscopic guitar tuner. If his name is familiar that’s because we mentioned he’d be giving a talk with [Travis Goodspeed] at ToorCon. But he went to ...
State-of-the-art technology, including stroboscopic and endoscopic techniques, provides precise observation and evaluation of the vocal and respiratory mechanisms. Services are designed for ...
South Georgia sometimes seems like a time-lapse film of weather—one of those frantic abridgments in which clouds boil across the sky while a stroboscopic flickering of light and shadow passes ...
Objectives To determine if limiting visual information by using stroboscopic eyewear alters spatial and temporal measures of static postural control. Background Multiple musculoskeletal injuries alter ...
The Time Control Glove uses the stroboscopic effect, which many of us have seen used in timeless water drop fountains where the strobe rate makes drops appear to change speed, freeze in place ...
Thanks to a unique stroboscopic acquisition mode, DHM is a popular tool for static and dynamic analysis of MEMS (Fig. 2). DHM allows dynamic characterization of structures in periodic or ...
a brainwave entrainment device that uses 12 stroboscopic lights to create immersive visual experiences. The Alpha-Stim device ...
Strobe lighting at music festivals can increase the risk of epileptic seizures, researchers have warned. The Dutch team said even people who have not been diagnosed with epilepsy might be affected.
A set of curved plastic LCD lenses offer a wide field of view allowing for the essential uninhibited peripheral vision with the stroboscopic effect feeling strange at first but following a couple ...
The fact that flashing lights can cause hallucinations was not surprising to scientists. Stroboscopic light, familiar to many from dancefloors, has been used in neuroscience research for 200 years.