Saccadic compression of rectangle and Kanizsa figures: now you see it, now you don't

Observers misperceive the location of points within a scene as compressed towards the goal of a saccade. However, recent studies suggest that saccadic compression does not occur for discrete elements such as dots when they are perceived as unified objects like a rectangle. We investigated the magnit...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2009-07, Vol.4 (7), p.e6383-e6383
Hauptverfasser: Noritake, Atsushi, Uttl, Bob, Terao, Masahiko, Nagai, Masayoshi, Watanabe, Junji, Yagi, Akihiro
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container_issue 7
container_start_page e6383
container_title PloS one
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creator Noritake, Atsushi
Uttl, Bob
Terao, Masahiko
Nagai, Masayoshi
Watanabe, Junji
Yagi, Akihiro
description Observers misperceive the location of points within a scene as compressed towards the goal of a saccade. However, recent studies suggest that saccadic compression does not occur for discrete elements such as dots when they are perceived as unified objects like a rectangle. We investigated the magnitude of horizontal vs. vertical compression for Kanizsa figure (a collection of discrete elements unified into single perceptual objects by illusory contours) and control rectangle figures. Participants were presented with Kanizsa and control figures and had to decide whether the horizontal or vertical length of stimulus was longer using the two-alternative force choice method. Our findings show that large but not small Kanizsa figures are perceived as compressed, that such compression is large in the horizontal dimension and small or nil in the vertical dimension. In contrast to recent findings, we found no saccadic compression for control rectangles. Our data suggest that compression of Kanizsa figure has been overestimated in previous research due to methodological artifacts, and highlight the importance of studying perceptual phenomena by multiple methods.
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subjects Adult
Compression
Data compression
Eye movements
Female
Humanities
Humans
Male
Neuroscience/Cognitive Neuroscience
Neuroscience/Experimental Psychology
Neuroscience/Natural and Synthetic Vision
Neuroscience/Psychology
Neuroscience/Sensory Systems
Perceptions
Quantitative psychology
Rectangles
Saccades
Saccadic eye movements
Science
title Saccadic compression of rectangle and Kanizsa figures: now you see it, now you don't
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