In the typical Orbison illusion, the sides of a square placed on concentric circles appear to be bending toward the center of the circles. We report a motion version of the Orbison illusion (namely, the kinetic Orbison illusion). When a dot moves along a square trajectory against a background of concentric circles, the sides of the trajectory appear to bend toward the center and the corners appear to be sharpened. In the present study, observers adjusted the shape of a comparison stimulus to the shape of the perceived trajectory by bending the sides. The amount of illusion was operationally defined as the largest discrepancy between the square and adjusted shape in the comparison stimulus. It was found that the illusory bending was more than twice the static Orbison illusion and reached a maximum of 7.3% of the length of one side. Experiments including a comparison between fixation and pursuit conditions revealed that the main cause of the kinetic illusion was not motion streaks of the dot crossing background circles. We propose an alternative hypothesis based on induced motion generated by background circle motion, the direction of which is misperceived owing to the aperture problem.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/20416695231196979 | DOI Listing |
Iperception
September 2023
Faculty of Design, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan.
In the typical Orbison illusion, the sides of a square placed on concentric circles appear to be bending toward the center of the circles. We report a motion version of the Orbison illusion (namely, the kinetic Orbison illusion). When a dot moves along a square trajectory against a background of concentric circles, the sides of the trajectory appear to bend toward the center and the corners appear to be sharpened.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Vis
December 2016
Faculty of Human-Environment Studies, Kyushu University, Fukuoka,
In this study, we report a new visual shape illusion, the eggs illusion, in which circular disks located at the midpoints between adjacent grid intersections are perceived as being deformed to ellipses. In Experiment 1, we examined the eggs illusion by using a matching method and found that grid luminance and patch size play a critical role in producing the illusory deformation. In Experiment 2, we employed several types of elliptic or circular patches to examine the conditions in which the illusory deformation was cancelled or weakened.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPerception
January 2003
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708-0086, USA.
There is a significant delay between the time when light hits the retina and the time of the consequent percept. It has been hypothesized that the visual system attempts to correct for this latency by generating a percept representative of the way the world probably is at the time the percept is elicited, rather than a percept of the recent past. Here we show that such a 'perceiving the present' hypothesis explains a number of classical geometrical illusions: the Hering, Orbison, Müller-Lyer, Double Judd, Poggendorff, Corner, and Upside-down-T illusions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Brain Res
April 1992
Department of Neurophysiology, Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology, Warsaw, Poland.
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.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt was observed by chance that illusions in patterns consisting of criss-crossing lines, such as the Orbison and Hering illusions, are markedly reduced when the patterns are blurred. In the first of two experiments the reduction with blurring was confirmed for four patterns but failed to occur in patterns lacking criss-crossing lines. In the second experiment the reduction was shown to be due mainly to the reduced luminance contrast in blurred patterns, thus confirming earlier findings on the effect of contrast of this group of illusions.
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