Beta movement - Wikipedia
Beta movement - Wikipedia

en.wikipedia.org
Beta movement - Wikipedia

The term beta movement is used for the optical illusion of apparent motion in which the very short projection of one figure and a subsequent very short projection of a more or less similar figure in a different location are experienced as one figure moving.
I'm still very confused after reading the article. Is the effect that we can kinda see a "snake" moving in this animation? Because that seems different from the explanation (very short projection of one figure and a subsequent very short projection of a more or less similar figure in a different location are experienced as one figure moving); in the snake example, at least I don't see any "projected figure" moving, instead the projected figures form a shape, and that shape "seems to be moving" (and even then not really, I am consciously interpreting this as movement rather than being convinced that it is). I tried looking for another visual example online but the web is so broken that I couldn't find anything but videos of AI voices reading the same wiki article over a static frame of this same animation.
The Zipper on buildings is a clearer example, especially the original which was made of incandescent bulbs. An image is displayed, then it is displayed 1X space to the left, a new image replaces it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/News_ticker
But that's just how any digital video works, no? And on the Wiki it seems to suggest that beta movement is somehow different: