Arthur Shapiro (vision scientist)


Arthur "Art" Shapiro is an American vision scientist and creator of visual illusions. He is the co-editor of the Oxford Compendium of Visual Illusions. He is currently a professor of psychology and computer science with the American University in Washington, D.C. and Director of the Collaborative for Applied Perceptual Research and Innovation.

Research and recognition

Shapiro completed his undergraduate work in mathematics and psychology at U.C. San Diego. He received his PhD in psychology from Columbia University and completed post-doctoral research at the University of Chicago, working with Joel Pokorny and Vivianne C. Smith in the Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences. His research focuses on color, motion, vision in low-light environments, and visual phenomena.
Shapiro's work on motion perception has been featured in news articles, television programming, and viral videos. CuriosityStream produced a five-part series on visual illusions of which Shapiro was the narrator and presenter. The New York Times and NPR have each written pieces examining Shapiro's contributions to vision science and motion illusions. The National Geographic program Brain Games utilized Shapiro as a "Motion Expert" to explore human vision and the neuroscience behind several popular motion illusions. Similarly, both USA Today and NBC Washington have featured Shapiro's scientific analysis of #thedress. Shapiro has also been featured on the YouTube channel "Illusions and Science", exhibiting his "Tusi or Not Tusi" motion illusion Shapiro was also featured on several episodes of New England Sport's Network 's Baseball Lab.
In 2014, Shapiro was selected to be a member of "The Nifty Fifty", a group of international professionals organized by the USA Science and Engineering Festival to promote the STEM fields to secondary school students across the United States. Other members of the "Nifty Fifty" include Elon Musk, Michael Shermer, and Sylvester James Gates.
Shapiro was selected as a top-ten finalist to the Best Illusion of the Year Contest twelve times. He has received the first place prize twice. Each of the selected entries are listed and referenced below.
YearPlaceTitle & Link
20051stTitle: Motion-Illusion Building Blocks
20073rdTitle: Where Has All the Motion Gone?
2007Top-TenTitle: "Weaves" and the Hermann Grid
2007Top-TenTitle: Swimmers, Eels, and other Gradient Illusions
2008Top-TenTitle: Dramatically Different Percepts between Foveal and Peripheral Vision
2008Top-TenTitle: Perpetual Collisions
20091stTitle: The Break of the Curveball
20112ndTitle: Grouping by Contrast
2011Top-TenTitle: The Exchange of Features, Textures and Faces
20123rdTitle: Color Wagon Wheel
20132ndTitle: Tusi or Not Tusi
2014Top-TenTitle: Hybrid Motion and the Integration of Motion Elements
2015Top-TenTitle: Star Wars Scroll Illusion
2016Top-TenTitle: Remote Controls