Howe Catherine Q, Purves Dale
Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, Box 90999, Durham, NC 27708, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2005 Jan 25;102(4):1228-33. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0409311102. Epub 2005 Jan 18.
Visual stimuli that entail the intersection of two or more straight lines elicit a variety of well known perceptual anomalies. Preeminent among these anomalies are the systematic overestimation of acute angles, the underestimation of obtuse angles, and the misperceptions of line orientation exemplified in the classical tilt, Zollner, and Hering illusions. Here we show that the probability distributions of the possible real-world sources of projected lines and angles derived from a range-image database of natural scenes accurately predict each of these perceptual peculiarities. These findings imply that the perception of angles and oriented lines is determined by the statistical relationship between geometrical stimuli and their physical sources in typical visual environments.
涉及两条或更多条直线相交的视觉刺激会引发各种众所周知的感知异常。这些异常中最突出的是锐角的系统性高估、钝角的低估以及经典倾斜、佐尔纳和赫林错觉中体现的线方向的错误感知。在这里,我们表明,从自然场景的距离图像数据库中得出的投影线和角度的可能现实世界来源的概率分布准确地预测了这些感知特性中的每一个。这些发现意味着,角度和有方向的线的感知是由典型视觉环境中几何刺激与其物理来源之间的统计关系决定的。