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Refractive error and monocular viewing strengthen the hollow-face illusion

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posted on 2024-11-16, 06:24 authored by Harold Hill, Stephen PalmisanoStephen Palmisano, Harold Matthews
We measured the strength of the hollow-face illusion-the 'flipping distance' at which perception changes between convex and concave-as a function of a lens-induced 3 dioptre refractive error and monocular/binocular viewing. Refractive error and closing one eye both strengthened the illusion to approximately the same extent. The illusion was weakest viewed binocularly without refractive error and strongest viewed monocularly with it. This suggests binocular cues disambiguate the illusion at greater distances than monocular cues, but that both are disrupted by refractive error. We argue that refractive error leaves the ambiguous low-spatial-frequency shading information critical to the illusion largely unaffected while disrupting other, potentially disambiguating, depth/distance cues. 2012 a Pion publication.

Funding

Face-space: linking three-dimensional shape and human perception across changing viewing conditions

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Hill, H. C., Palmisano, S. A. & Matthews, H. (2012). Refractive error and monocular viewing strengthen the hollow-face illusion. Perception, 41 (10), 1281-1285.

Journal title

Perception

Volume

41

Issue

10

Pagination

1281-1285

Publisher website/DOI

Language

English

RIS ID

73886

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