AI Article Synopsis

  • The horizontal-vertical (HV) illusion causes people and animals to overestimate vertical objects' lengths compared to horizontal ones.
  • Research on this phenomenon mainly involves primates, which often move horizontally while exploring their surroundings, suggesting unique perceptual mechanisms for size judgments.
  • In a study with guppies, fish showed no bias in estimating lengths for L-shapes but did perceive a bisected vertical line in an inverted T-shape as shorter, indicating a potential length bisection bias in fish.

Article Abstract

The horizontal-vertical (HV) illusion is characterized by a tendency to overestimate the length of vertically-arranged objects. Comparative research is primarily confined to primates, a range of species that, although arboreal, often explore their environment moving along the horizontal axis. Such behaviour may have led to the development of asymmetrical perceptual mechanisms to make relative size judgments of objects placed vertically and horizontally. We observed the susceptibility to the HV illusion in fish, whose ability to swim along the horizontal and vertical plane permits them to scan objects' size equally on both axes. Guppies (Poecilia reticulata) were trained to select the longer orange line to receive a food reward. In the test phase, two arrays, containing two same-sized lines were presented, one horizontally and the other vertically. Black lines were also included in each pattern to generate the perception of an inverted T-shape (where a horizontal line is bisected by a vertical one) or an L-shape (no bisection). No bias was observed in the L-shape, which supports the idea of differential perceptual mechanisms for primates and fish. In the inverted T-shape, guppies estimated the bisected line as shorter, providing the first evidence of a length bisection bias in a fish species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7224554PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0233157PLOS

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