Transformations: Difference between revisions

>Kenan
m Grammatics
>David Hedlund
('''morphopsia''')
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{{#ev:gfycat|https://zippy.gfycat.com/CoolSecondhandEyas.webm|295x220|right|This animation serves as a replication for the common [[psychedelic]] visual effect known as [[transformations]]. It accurately demonstrates the smooth and fluid-like transitions of an object as it morphs between a variety of other forms.|frame}}
{{#ev:gfycat|https://zippy.gfycat.com/CoolSecondhandEyas.webm|295x220|right|This animation serves as a replication for the common [[psychedelic]] visual effect known as [[transformations]]. It accurately demonstrates the smooth and fluid-like transitions of an object as it morphs between a variety of other forms.|frame}}
'''Transformations''' can be described as the experience of a perceived visual metamorphosis of specific parts of one's external environment into other objects. For example, people who undergo this effect will often report seeing parts of their environment shifting into completely different things. These transformations have a huge variety of potential artistic styles and differing styles of detail, realism, and animation.  
'''Transformations''' ('''morphopsia''') can be described as the experience of a perceived visual metamorphosis of specific parts of one's external environment into other objects. For example, people who undergo this effect will often report seeing parts of their environment shifting into completely different things. These transformations have a huge variety of potential artistic styles and differing styles of detail, realism, and animation.  


These hallucinations are progressive in nature, which means they form by arising from patterns or objects and then, over a period of seconds, by smoothly drifting the object through a fluid motion into an entirely new form. This is significantly enhanced and fueled by the separate visual effect of [[pattern recognition enhancement]]. It causes vague stimuli and specific objects to transform into incredibly detailed versions of what they were already perceived as looking similar to.  
These hallucinations are progressive in nature, which means they form by arising from patterns or objects and then, over a period of seconds, by smoothly drifting the object through a fluid motion into an entirely new form. This is significantly enhanced and fueled by the separate visual effect of [[pattern recognition enhancement]]. It causes vague stimuli and specific objects to transform into incredibly detailed versions of what they were already perceived as looking similar to.