The ‘Rotating Snakes’ in Smooth Motion do Not Appear to Rotate

‘Rotating snakes’ is an illusory figure in which the ‘snakes’ are perceived to rotate. We report that when the image moves smoothly, the snakes do not appear to rotate, although the retinal images are continuously refreshed. Therefore, to produce the illusion, the image should remain stationary (wit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Perception (London) 2010-01, Vol.39 (5), p.721-724
Hauptverfasser: Tomimatsu, Erika, Ito, Hiroyuki, Seno, Takeharu, Sunaga, Shoji
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container_title Perception (London)
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creator Tomimatsu, Erika
Ito, Hiroyuki
Seno, Takeharu
Sunaga, Shoji
description ‘Rotating snakes’ is an illusory figure in which the ‘snakes’ are perceived to rotate. We report that when the image moves smoothly, the snakes do not appear to rotate, although the retinal images are continuously refreshed. Therefore, to produce the illusion, the image should remain stationary (without being refreshed) for some time on the same retinal position.
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subjects Adult
Humans
Motion Perception - physiology
Optical Illusions - physiology
Photic Stimulation
Rotation
Young Adult
title The ‘Rotating Snakes’ in Smooth Motion do Not Appear to Rotate
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