An object in outer space is weightless due to the absence of gravity, but astronauts can still judge whether one object is heavier than another one by accelerating the object. How heavy an object feels depends on the exploration mode: an object is perceived as heavier when holding it against the pull of gravity than when accelerating it. At the same time, perceiving an object’s size influences the percept: small objects feel heavier than large objects with the same mass (size– weight illusion). Does this effect depend on perception of the pull of gravity? To answer this question, objects were suspended from a long wire and participants were asked to push an object and rate its heaviness. This way the contribution of gravitational forces on ...
The size-weight illusion is well-known: if two equally heavy objects differ in size, the large one f...
\u3cp\u3eThe size-weight illusion is the phenomenon that the smaller of two equally heavy objects is...
Two objects of similar visual aspects and of equal mass, but of different sizes, generally do not el...
An object in outer space is weightless due to the absence of gravity, but astronauts can still judge...
An object in outer space is weightless due to the absence of gravity, but astronauts can still judge...
\u3cp\u3eAn object in outer space is weightless due to the absence of gravity, but astronauts can st...
An object in outer space is weightless due to the absence of gravity, but astronauts can still judge...
When an observer lifts two objects with the same weight but different sizes, the smaller object is c...
When an observer lifts two objects with the same weight but different sizes, the smaller object is c...
An important part of the literature on the size-weight illusion ascribes great importance to expecta...
In the size-weight illusion (SWI), a small object feels heavier than an equally-weighted larger obje...
The size-weight illusion is well-known: if two equally heavy objects differ in size, the large one f...
In the size-weight illusion (SWI), a small object feels heavier than an equally-weighted larger obje...
The size-weight illusion is well-known: if two equally heavy objects differ in size, the large one f...
The size-weight illusion is well-known: if two equally heavy objects differ in size, the large one f...
The size-weight illusion is well-known: if two equally heavy objects differ in size, the large one f...
\u3cp\u3eThe size-weight illusion is the phenomenon that the smaller of two equally heavy objects is...
Two objects of similar visual aspects and of equal mass, but of different sizes, generally do not el...
An object in outer space is weightless due to the absence of gravity, but astronauts can still judge...
An object in outer space is weightless due to the absence of gravity, but astronauts can still judge...
\u3cp\u3eAn object in outer space is weightless due to the absence of gravity, but astronauts can st...
An object in outer space is weightless due to the absence of gravity, but astronauts can still judge...
When an observer lifts two objects with the same weight but different sizes, the smaller object is c...
When an observer lifts two objects with the same weight but different sizes, the smaller object is c...
An important part of the literature on the size-weight illusion ascribes great importance to expecta...
In the size-weight illusion (SWI), a small object feels heavier than an equally-weighted larger obje...
The size-weight illusion is well-known: if two equally heavy objects differ in size, the large one f...
In the size-weight illusion (SWI), a small object feels heavier than an equally-weighted larger obje...
The size-weight illusion is well-known: if two equally heavy objects differ in size, the large one f...
The size-weight illusion is well-known: if two equally heavy objects differ in size, the large one f...
The size-weight illusion is well-known: if two equally heavy objects differ in size, the large one f...
\u3cp\u3eThe size-weight illusion is the phenomenon that the smaller of two equally heavy objects is...
Two objects of similar visual aspects and of equal mass, but of different sizes, generally do not el...