No such thing as a break in a curveball? (Animation):

.

In award-winning demo, neuroscientists at USC and American University suggest curveballs do not break

The answer to the question of whose curveball breaks harder — that of the Yankees’ A.J. Burnett or the Phillies’ Cole Hamels — may be neither.

Zhong-Lin Lu, a professor of cognitive neuroscience at USC, along with USC alumni Emily Knight and Robert Ennis and Arthur Shapiro, associate professor of psychology at American University, developed a simple visual demo that suggests a curveball’s break is, at least in part, a trick of the eye.

Their demo won the Best Visual Illusion of the Year prize at the Vision Sciences meeting earlier this year.

Try it at http://illusioncontest.neuralcorrelate.com/2009/the-break-of-the-curveball/.

The idea is that the effect is due to the batters being forced to switch between peripheral vision and central vision during a swing.

Join over 320,000 readers. Get a free weekly update via email here.

Related posts:

New Neuroscience Reveals 4 Rituals That Will Make You Happy

New Harvard Research Reveals A Fun Way To Be More Successful

How To Get People To Like You: 7 Ways From An FBI Behavior Expert

Share

Subscribe to the newsletter