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Greene E - - 1994
One can shear a pattern of lines to produce an anomalous contour which has a perceptual influence similar to that of a straight line segment. Illusion effects have been found with configurations which contain these anomalous contours, as well as cross adaptation with respect to luminance contours. We have found ...
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Masini R - - 1994
A black, 8-shaped pattern, whose centre of gravity is in the centre of a rotating disc, appears to split into two black discs rotating with phenomenal independent motion, orientation stability, and sliding of one on the other. The type of observed movement, the order of overlapping, and the extent of ...
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Broerse J - - 1994
The three-loop figure is a two-dimensional (2-D) pattern that generates (mis)perceptions of nonrigid three-dimensional (3-D) structure when rotated about its centre. Such observations have been described as counterexamples to the principle whereby a moving object is presumed to be rigid, provided that a rigid interpretation is possible (ie the 'rigidity ...
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Spillmann L - - 1994
Psychophysical research on the Hermann grid illusion is reviewed and possible neurophysiological mechanisms are discussed. The illusion is most plausibly explained by lateral inhibition within the concentric receptive fields of retinal and/or geniculate ganglion cells, with contributions by the binocular orientation-specific cortical cells. Results may be summarized as follows: (a) ...
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Adelson E H - - 1993
The perceived brightness of a gray patch depends on the surrounding context. For example, a medium-gray patch appears darker when placed on a bright background and brighter when placed on a dark background. Models to explain these effects are usually based on simple low-level mechanisms. A new set of brightness ...
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Mateeff S - - 1993
A new phenomenon of viewing objects through multiple apertures is reported. When a solid figure is hidden behind a sieve of very small apertures (pinholes), only its general shape may be perceived. Outline figures may be entirely invisible behind the sieve. Motion of the figure markedly improves the visibility of ...
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Grosof D H - - 1993
We describe here a new view of primary visual cortex (V1) based on measurements of neural responses in V1 to patterns called 'illusory contours' (Fig. 1a, b). Detection of an object's boundary contours is a fundamental visual task. Boundary contours are defined by discontinuities not only in luminance and colour, ...
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Redding G M - - 1993
When a temporal delay is interposed between the contextual elements (wings) and the focal element (central axis) of the Müller-Lyer figures, the usual assimilation illusion changes to an illusion of contrast; that is, judged axis length is contrasted away from rather than assimilated toward the context provided by parallel extents ...
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Castet E - - 1993
In this study, the perceived speed of a tilted line translating horizontally (for a duration of 167 msec) is evaluated with respect to a vertical line undergoing the same translation. Perceived speed of the oblique line is shown to be underestimated when compared to the vertical line. This bias increases: ...
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Kovács I - - 1993
Detection of fragmented closed contours against a cluttered background occurs much beyond the local coherence distance (maximal separation between segments) of nonclosed contours. This implies that the extent of interaction between locally connected detectors is boosted according to the global stimulus structure. We further show that detection of a target ...
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Takahashi S - - 1993
To investigate the operation of two figural cues of "alignment" and "incompletion" in the perception of subjective contour, the microgenetic process of perception of subjective contour was analyzed. Two inducing patterns were used, one with both "alignment" and "incompletion" cues and another with only an "alignment" cue. The latter was ...
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Fujita N - - 1993
Suppose that there is a circle in front of a cross, the central part of which is occluded by the circle. One usually perceives these figures, as such, although the objective description of the stimulus pattern might be that there is a circle with four limbs attached to it. Here ...
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Hikosaka O - - 1993
Spatial attention was studied using a new visual illusion of motion: a line, which was presented physically at once, was perceived to be drawn from one side when attention had been captured to that side of the line by a preceding visual cue stimulus. By comparing with a temporal order ...
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King D L - - 1993
Stimulus A consisted of two proximal brackets with colinear lines separated by small gaps. Stimulus B was a square-like rectangle produced by inserting connecting segments into the gaps. Stimulus A was frequently represented as B (i.e., as closed). Following Pomerantz and Pristach (1989) and Treisman and Paterson (1984), perhaps A ...
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Spivey-Knowlton M J - - 1993
The Poggendorff illusion has often been explained as purely an interaction between the parallels and the transversals. The present study demonstrates that additional spatial context exerts an influence on this illusion. In Experiment 1, we examined the effects of a surrounding tilted frame (complete and degraded versions) on collinearity adjustments ...
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Kojo I - - 1993
The best known example of illusory figures is the Kanizsa triangle consisting of three disks with a sector removed. The disks and sectors are arranged so that they form the corners of a triangle. Although the sides of the triangle are not physically present, they are clearly visible to the ...
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Jaeger T - - 1993
For 48 observers, the central circle of Ebbinghaus figures appeared smaller as the separation between it and the contextual circles increased. Lightness of the contours only affected the illusion when the contextual circles were large and located close to the central circle. An explanation incorporating size contrast and attraction between ...
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Foster D H - - 1993
Seven potential geometric cues for contour-curvature discrimination were tested: curvature, turning-angle, arc-length, arc-length-divided-by-chord-length, maximum-deviation (sag), mean-deviation and area. Three experiments were performed, each requiring the discrimination of two simultaneously presented, 1-sec-duration, curved-line stimuli, whose chord-lengths ranged from 12 to 48 arcmin visual angle and whose curvatures ranged from 0 to ...
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Muise J G - - 1993
Using the Kanizsa triangle in a free-inspection paradigm, Gellatly has shown that subjects report seeing an illusory triangle while apparently not phenomenally aware of the inducing areas. It is argued that Gellatly's procedure may induce response processes which camouflage early sensory processes. By forcing subjects to choose between two response ...
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Ito H - - 1993
An ambiguous moving pattern which gives rise to the reverse of the barber-pole illusion is reported. When vertical sine-wave lines translate, vertically and endlessly, on a two-dimensional (2-D) plane, one can perceive rotating three-dimensional (3-D) helixes without the impression of translation. With a single sine-wave line, 3-D rotation was seen ...
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Dresp B - - 1993
Thresholds for the detection of a small light target (increment thresholds), measured at the ends of white lines and small luminance edges, are lower than when the target is presented on a plain field. This facilitation effect disappears when: (1) the line-end is 'stopped' by another line with perpendicular orientation; ...
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Hill H - - 1993
Three experiments were conducted to investigate factors contributing to the 'hollow face' illusion. A novel method was employed in which the distance from the mask at which the illusion became apparent or disappeared, when retreating or approaching, respectively, was taken as a measure of the strength of the illusion. In ...
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Wertheim A H - - 1992
During a pursuit eye movement made across a stationary stimulus, that stimulus is often perceived as moving slightly in the direction opposite to the eyes (Filehne illusion). The illusion is generally thought to increase in strength when the stimulus is made visible only briefly. In two experiments the illusion was ...
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Dresp B - - 1992
In two experiments, brightness enhancement of the illusory surface in the Kanizsa square was investigated by means of a brightness matching procedure. The results show that specific properties of the inducing elements such as size, spacing, and luminance have effects on the matching threshold that are similar to those previously ...
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Takahashi S - - 1992
Using colored inducing patterns presented as increments upon a white uniform background, the increment thresholds needed for illusory contour perception were measured as a function of the wavelength of inducing pattern. The spectral sensitivity functions were obtained with varying adaptation level and stimulus configuration, high and low background illumination, and ...
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Radvansky G A - - 1992
The scale illusion (Deutsch, 1975) shows the importance of frequency range in the perceptual organization of a sequence of notes. This paper includes three experiments on the scale illusion. Experiments 1 and 2 demonstrated that if the structure of the pattern of notes used in the original scale illusion study ...
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Viviani P - - 1992
Six experiments demonstrate a visual dynamic illusion. Previous work has shown that in 2-dimensional (2D) drawing movements, tangential velocity and radius of curvature covary in a constrained manner. The velocity of point stimuli is perceived as uniform if and only if this biological constraint is satisfied. The illusion is conspicuous: ...
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ON- and OFF-pathways form separate neural substrates for motion perception: psychophysical evidence.
Wehrhahn C - - 1992
We have tested the hypothesis that in humans the signals carried by ON- and OFF-pathway respectively are processed for the perception of motion by two distinct physiological substrates. In vertebrates, onset of a bright visual stimulus is signaled to the CNS by ON-center retinal ganglion cells; onset of a dark ...
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Matin L - - 1992
The elevation visually perceived as eye level (VPEL) changes linearly with the pitch of an illuminated visual field. The magnitude of influence is only slightly less when the visual field contains only two dim vertical lines in darkness than when it is complexly structured and normally illuminated. Pitching a visual ...
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Grabowska A - - 1992
The study tested the effect of the left and right hemisphere lesions on the susceptibility to visual illusions. Twenty-five patients with left hemisphere damage, 22 patients with right hemisphere damage and 23 control subjects inspected series of figures producing four different illusions: Ponzo, Ehrenstein-Orbison, Poggendorff and Zoellner. Series of stimuli ...
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Laming D - - 1992
Hermann's grid is a complete matrix of black squares; Springer's figure has alternate squares whited out. Both figures generate illusory elements, bright and dark lines in the white spaces, with different elements seen from different distances. The visibility of these different elements is shown to be related to the detectability ...
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Zoccolotti P - - 1992
The rod-and-frame illusion was used to examine a proposed distinction between the mechanism responsible for frame effects on rod-adjustment errors with large displays and the mechanism responsible for errors with small displays. It was suggested that visual-vestibular mechanisms are involved only when the rod is surrounded by a large tilted ...
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Higashiyama A - - 1992
Three experiments investigated anisotropic perception of visual angle outdoors. In Experiment 1, scales for vertical and horizontal visual angles ranging from 20 degrees to 80 degrees were constructed with the method of angle production (in which the subject reproduced a visual angle with a protractor) and the method of distance ...
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Dimitrov G V - - 1992
The charge-duration and strength-duration relations for just threshold rectangular stimuli were numerically investigated for the Hodgkin-Huxley axons of different lengths and different membrane capacitances under normal conditions and blockage of the development of accommodative processes. Two linear portions could be distinguished on the charge-duration curve. One of them followed the ...
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Rock I - - 1992
In studying the reversal of ambiguous figures investigators understandably have always informed subjects of the reversibility of the figures and of how each version appears. However, such knowledge may be a cause of reversal and is therefore an undesirable aspect of the method used to study it. An experiment is ...
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Wildzunas R M - - 1992
When observers view a vertical triangle-wave luminance profile, they often report a square-wave illusion with a depth component, resembling a corrugated surface. Alternate bars seem to be in front of or behind adjacent bars and the surface appears to be illuminated from the right or left. These perspectives alternate with ...
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Cormack R - - 1992
An object moving against a textured background is accurately perceived when viewed foveally, but when viewed peripherally the object's perceived direction of motion may deviate from veridical by as much as 90 deg. The illusory direction is oblique to the orientation of the background contours, which may themselves be moving ...
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Jolicoeur P - - 1991
Subjects decided whether 2 dots were on the same curve or 2 different curves, and the curvature of the curves or the proximity of other (distractor) curves to the target curve was varied. Response time increased as the arc length of the curve connecting the 2 dots increased, suggesting that ...
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Branum A R - - 1991
A rotating sphere with an artistically painted surface may appear to reverse its direction of rotation and at the same time reverse its curvature from convex to concave (the Termes Illusion). This study tested the effects of 4 rotational speeds (stationary, 1 rpm, 2.5 rpm, and 3.75 rpm) in producing ...
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Shiffrar M - - 1991
Humans consistently err in their percepts of rotational motion viewed through an aperture. Such errors provide insight into the constraints observers use to interpret retinal images. In the 1st of 2 experiments, Ss consistently perceived the fixed center of rotation for an unmarked line viewed through an aperture as located ...
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Stuart G W - - 1991
The cause of the Fraser illusion, which occurs when a line made up of tilted segments itself appears tilted, is examined further. In this series of experiments, we used figures that resembled the original Fraser illusion; they were more complex than those reported on in our previous paper (Stuart & ...
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Taylor J L - - 1991
Vibration of the posterior muscles of the neck in human subjects induces illusions of displacement and movement of a visual target when there is no visual reference (Biguer et al., 1988). Although illusions of head movement are rarely reported by subjects, when they point to the location of the nose ...
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Ozeki T - - 1991
Two experiments were done to examine whether an experimenter's suggestion and self-suggestion could affect the autokinetic illusion and to specify that effect. Exp. I compared the effect of a facilitative suggestion with a suppressive one, by measuring the moving latency, duration, frequency, and by analyzing the movement trace. Time and ...
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Suzuki K - - 1991
In 1962, Kaufman and Rock reported that the moon illusion did not occur in the darkness of a planetarium or in a completely dark room. The present study reexamined their findings. Two pairs of light points, separated by 3.5 degrees, were presented on the dome screen of a planetarium. Subjects ...
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Coren S - - 1991
One mechanism frequently proposed for the creation of subjective contours and their related brightness effects involves lateral neural interactions on the retina, such as the lateral inhibitory effects that underlie brightness contrast. Subjective contour stimuli were displayed under an intermittent light source, with rapid onset and slow offset as has ...
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Bruno N - - 1991
A new type of motion-induced illusory figure determined by local kinematic information is investigated. The new figure is induced by radial line patterns subjected to either figure motion (the lines change as if they were stationary and a triangle was rotating in front of them) or background motion (the lines ...
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Brown J M - - 1991
Moving phantom visibility was measured in two experiments where the global figure-ground and depth relations within phantom-inducing patterns were manipulated. The local inducing environment where the illusion occurred was identical for all patterns. Phantom visibility was significantly reduced when occlusion cues specified the phantom-inducing parts of a pattern as ground. ...
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Purghé F - - 1991
Two kinds of figural condition affecting the formation of anomalous surfaces were examined in three experiments. The strengths of two factors (figural incompleteness and width of the inducing areas) were compared in order to determine: i) which of the two factors is more effective in the creation of the illusion, ...
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Sugawara M - - 1991
In order to investigate the relationship between the appearance of illusory figures and the wave form of visual evoked potentials (VEPs), 8 different visual pattern stimuli were presented to 8 normal subjects. Four of the stimuli (experimental stimuli) produced subjective figures and contours (squares and discs). The 4 other stimuli ...
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Siegel S - - 1991
Subjective contours have been of considerable interest because of their importance to theories and physiological models of form perception. In particular, they have recently been characterized as the result of magnocellular cortical processing. There is, however, a paucity of parametric data relating to basic psychophysical parameters in this field. Two ...
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