Publication | Closed Access
Satiation Effects with Reversible Figures
49
Citations
6
References
1981
Year
Computer Graphic TechniqueAffective NeuroscienceAttentionSocial SciencesComputer-generated ImageryIncomplete CubeEarly VisionCognitive NeurosciencePsychophysicsCognitive ScienceSatiation EffectsVision ResearchReversal RateVisual ProcessingEqual LuminanceVisual FunctionPhysically Based AnimationEye TrackingNeuroscience
Three experiments were performed to examine the rate at which reversible perspective figures (Necker cubes) undergo apparent reversal, as a function of selected stimulus variables. 100 subjects were instructed not to inhibit or to promote reversals of perspective, but to remain neutral. The data indicated: (1) an incomplete cube reverses less frequently than does a corresponding complete figure, (2) two adjacent cubes reverse in synchrony when of equal luminance but often out of phase when differing in luminance, (3) a shift of the cube's retinal position causes its reversal rate to drop to baseline level. These results suggest that the reversal effect increases over time due to a localized rather than general process, and are thus compatible with a sensory satiation model of perceptual alternation.
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