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 configurations were constructed so that different degrees of distortion opposite to the illusory effect were introduced in each pattern. The amount of distortion was increased in steps so that at a certain point of the series the patterns produced percepts opposite to the illusory ones. That point indicated the strength of the illusion. Stimuli of a given series were presented to each subject 5 times in random order and subject's judgements of illusions were collected. The illusion strength was established using the Spearman distribution method for determining psychophysical thresholds. The results showed that the left and right hemisphere lesions either did not affect the subject's susceptibility to illusions (in Ponzo and Poggendorff) or their effects were similar, i.e. they reduced the strength of the perceived illusions (in Ehrenstein-Orbison and Zoellner). Our data contradict the hypothesis of hemisphere differences in the perception of visual illusions and support the view that those phenomena are multiple-caused.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0166-4328(05)80125-1 | DOI Listing |
Vision Res
January 2025
Laboratoire Cognition Langage et Développement, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium.
Animals and humans possess an adaptive ability to rapidly estimate approximate numerosity, yet the visual mechanisms underlying this process remain poorly understood. Evidence suggests that approximate numerosity relies on segmented perceptual units modulated by grouping cues, with perceived numerosity decreasing when objects are connected by irrelevant lines, independent of low-level features. However, most studies have focused on physical objects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cogn
January 2025
General Psychology, Trier University, Germany.
Observations from multisensory body illusions indicate that the body representation can be adapted to changing task demands, e.g., it can be expanded to integrate external objects based on current sensorimotor experience (embodiment).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPerception
January 2025
University of Wollongong, Australia.
Illusions of self-motion (vection) can be improved by adding global visual oscillation to patterns of optic flow. Here we examined whether adding apparent visual oscillation (based on four-stroke apparent motion-4SAM) also improves vection. This apparent vertical oscillation was added to self-motion displays simulating constant velocity leftward self-motion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTop Cogn Sci
January 2025
Department of Intelligence and Information, Seoul National University.
This study delves into how various musical factors influence the experience of auditory illusions, building on Diana Deutsch's scale illusion experiments and subsequent studies. Exploring the interaction between scale mode and timbre, this study assesses their influence on auditory misperceptions, while also considering the impact of an individual's musical training and ability to discern absolute pitch. Participants were divided into nonmusicians, musicians with absolute pitch, and musicians with relative pitch, and were exposed to stimuli modified across three scale modes (tonal, dissonant, atonal) and two timbres (same, different).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtten Percept Psychophys
January 2025
School of Kinesiology, Louisiana State University, 1250 Huey P. Long Field House, 50 Field House Drive, Baton Rouge, LA, 70803, USA.
We examined participants' abilities to manually estimate one of two perpendicular line segment lengths using curved point-to-point movements. Configurations involved symmetrical, unsymmetrical, and no bisection in upright and rotated orientation alterations to vertical-horizontal (V-H) illusions, where people often perceive longer vertical than horizontal segments for equal segment lengths. Participants used two orthogonally directed movements for length estimations: positively proportional (POS) - where greater fingertip displacement involved longer length estimation between configuration intersection start position and fingertip end, and negatively proportional (NEG) - where greater fingertip displacement from the screen edge start position toward configuration intersection involved a shorter length estimation between configuration intersection and fingertip end.
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