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The McGurk Effect

When your eyes change what your ears hear

Experience the Illusion

Watch the mouth and listen. What syllable do you hear?

Select Phoneme Combination

ba
ga
da
Audio-Visual Sync: 0ms

What did you hear?

The Paradox

The sound wave hitting your eardrums is objectively "ba" - but when you watch lips saying "ga," your brain actually hears "da"! This isn't a trick of attention or memory - your auditory cortex genuinely receives a different signal. Even knowing about the effect doesn't stop it. Researchers who have studied it for 20+ years still experience it every time.

How It Works

The McGurk effect demonstrates multisensory integration - your brain automatically combines audio and visual information into a unified percept:

Sound
ba
Audio
+
Lips
ga
Visual
=
Brain
da
Perceived

Your brain notices that "ba" (lips together) doesn't match what it sees (lips open for "ga"). Rather than reporting a conflict, it invents a compromise: "da" - a sound made with the tongue touching the roof of the mouth, which visually could look like either!

Fusion Effect

ba + ga = da

The brain creates a new syllable that's neither input

Combination Effect

ga + ba = bga

Both sounds heard in sequence

Visual Dominance

ba + va = va

Vision completely overrides audio

Voiceless Version

pa + ka = ta

Works with unvoiced consonants too

The Accidental Discovery

"We were studying infant speech perception..."

In 1976, Harry McGurk and John MacDonald were dubbing audio onto video of a speaker for an unrelated infant study. When they played back a tape with mismatched audio and video, they both heard something impossible - a syllable that wasn't on the audio track. They thought the tape was broken. It wasn't. They had discovered a new window into how the brain constructs reality.

1976
McGurk & MacDonald publish "Hearing Lips and Seeing Voices" in Nature, introducing the effect to science.
1980s
Research reveals the effect is remarkably robust - it persists even when subjects know about it.
1998
fMRI studies identify the left posterior Superior Temporal Sulcus (pSTS) as the key integration region.
2010s
Cross-cultural studies show susceptibility varies by language - Japanese and Chinese speakers are less affected.
2024
TMS research demonstrates causal role of pSTS - temporarily disrupting it reduces the McGurk effect.

Who Experiences It?

Not everyone is equally susceptible to the McGurk effect:

Susceptibility Varies By:

Women
More susceptible
Men
Less susceptible
Older Adults
More susceptible
Children <10
Less susceptible
English Speakers
Highly susceptible
Japanese/Chinese
Less susceptible

The Neuroscience

The left posterior Superior Temporal Sulcus (pSTS) is where your brain merges auditory and visual speech information. When researchers use Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation to temporarily disrupt this region, the McGurk effect weakens - proving it's truly a neural integration phenomenon, not just a cognitive quirk.

Why It Matters

It's Inescapable

Unlike most optical illusions that break once you "see through" them, the McGurk effect persists even when you know exactly what's happening. Researchers who have studied it for decades still experience it. Your brain simply cannot ignore the visual information.

"We hear with our eyes as well as our ears."
- Harry McGurk & John MacDonald, 1976