Prinzmetal W, Gettleman L
Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley 94720.
Percept Psychophys. 1993 Jan;53(1):81-8. doi: 10.3758/bf03211717.
The vertical-horizontal illusion is the tendency for observers to overestimate the length of a vertical line relative to a horizontal line that has the same length. One explanation of this illusion is that the visual field is elongated in the horizontal direction, and that the vertical-horizontal illusion is a kind of framing effect (Künnapas, 1957a, 1957b, 1957c). Since the monocular visual field is less asymmetric than the combined visual field, this theory predicts that the illusion should be reduced with monocular presentation. This prediction was tested in five experiments, in which the vertical-horizontal illusion was examined in a variety of situations--including observers seated upright versus reclined 90 degrees, monocular presentation with the dominant versus the nondominant eye, viewing in the dark versus in the light, and viewing with asymmetrical frames of reference. The illusion was reliably reduced with monocular presentation under conditions that affected the asymmetry of the phenomenal visual field.
垂直-水平错觉是指观察者倾向于高估垂直线的长度,相对于具有相同长度的水平线而言。对这种错觉的一种解释是,视野在水平方向上被拉长,并且垂直-水平错觉是一种框架效应(昆纳帕斯,1957a,1957b,1957c)。由于单眼视野的不对称性小于双眼合并视野,该理论预测,单眼呈现时错觉应会减弱。在五个实验中对这一预测进行了检验,其中在各种情境下对视错觉进行了研究——包括观察者直立与倾斜90度就座、用优势眼与非优势眼进行单眼呈现、在黑暗与明亮环境下观察,以及使用不对称参照框架进行观察。在影响现象视野不对称性的条件下,单眼呈现时错觉确实减弱了。