Visual discrimination between rectangular and nonrectangular parallelopipeds

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Abstract

Twenty-seven university students judged whether each of 128 drawings of parallelopipeds appeared to represent three-dimensional rectangular boxes. Half the pictures could not geometrically have been projections of rectangular boxes. The null hypothesis that Ss' judgments were unrelated to geometry was rejected at the .001 level of significance, and the correlation between Ss' judgments and perfect discrimination averaged .86 over three variations of the experiment. The results support a general hypothesis about the perception of simple space forms according to which viewers impose geometric constraints, such as rectangularity and symmetry, but only when the constraints are projectively possible. © 1972 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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APA

Perkins, D. N. (1972). Visual discrimination between rectangular and nonrectangular parallelopipeds. Perception & Psychophysics, 12(5), 396–400. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03205849

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