Visual orientation illusions: Global mechanisms involved in hierarchical effects and frames of reference

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Abstract

Five experiments were conducted in order to determine which of two hypotheses, initially proposed by Rock (1990), accounts for interactions between oriented elements in a visual scene. We also explored the suggestion that two hypothetical processes - namely, frame of reference and hierarchical organization describe phenomena arising from distinct mechanisms (Spinelli, Antonucci, Daini, Martelli, & Zoccolotti, 1999). Double inducing stimulus versions of one-dimensional and two-dimensional tilt illusions, the rod-and-frame illusion, and combinations of these were used. Our data suggest that both hypotheses can predict orientation interactions in conditions in which only one mechanism-namely, the global visual mechanism of symmetry axes extraction (Wenderoth & Beh, 1977) - is activated. Which hypothesis is appropriate to predict the perceived orientation depends on some physical features of the objects.

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Daini, R., Wenderoth, P., & Smith, S. (2003). Visual orientation illusions: Global mechanisms involved in hierarchical effects and frames of reference. Perception and Psychophysics, 65(5), 770–778. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03194813

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