When one looks up a hill from below, its peak appears lower than it is; when one looks at a hill across a valley from another peak, the peak of that hill appears higher than it is. These illusions have sometimes been explained by assuming that the subjective horizontal is assimilated to the nearby slope: when looking up a slope, the subjective horizontal is raised, diminishing the height of the peak above the subjective horizontal, and making the peak appear lower than it is. When looking down a slope towards another hill, the subjective horizontal is lowered, increasing the height of that hill above the subjective horizontal, and making its peak appear higher than it is. To determine subjective horizontals we measured visually perceived ey...
Some believe that palm boards are more accurate measures of perceived slope than are verbal reports....
The perceived inclination of slopes is generally overestimated. We claim that overestimation depends...
According to scale expansion theory two distinct sources of angular information are used to compute ...
When one looks up a hill from below, its peak appears lower than it is; when one looks at a hill acr...
A steep incline looks very steep from the top, as others have documented. However, we observed that ...
Geographical slope perception is notoriously susceptible to error. Hills tend to appear steeper than...
Several studies have shown that slopes of hills are greatly overestimated. We have recently demonstr...
Covington, Kentucky is home to Gravity Hill, a rare naturally occurring optical illusion in which a ...
A dramatic failure of orientation constancy is documented in the perception of downhill slopes. Cont...
Previous studies have shown that visual perception of geographical slant is greatly overestimated (P...
When people judge height from the top looking down they tend to overestimate vertical distance. Init...
Although it is widely believed that perception must be veridical for action to be accurate, an alter...
AbstractThe presence of one or two long, dim, eccentrically-placed, parallel, pitched-from-vertical ...
AbstractLocalization within the space in front of an observer can be specified along two orthogonal ...
Some believe that palm boards are more accurate measures of perceived slope than are verbal reports....
The perceived inclination of slopes is generally overestimated. We claim that overestimation depends...
According to scale expansion theory two distinct sources of angular information are used to compute ...
When one looks up a hill from below, its peak appears lower than it is; when one looks at a hill acr...
A steep incline looks very steep from the top, as others have documented. However, we observed that ...
Geographical slope perception is notoriously susceptible to error. Hills tend to appear steeper than...
Several studies have shown that slopes of hills are greatly overestimated. We have recently demonstr...
Covington, Kentucky is home to Gravity Hill, a rare naturally occurring optical illusion in which a ...
A dramatic failure of orientation constancy is documented in the perception of downhill slopes. Cont...
Previous studies have shown that visual perception of geographical slant is greatly overestimated (P...
When people judge height from the top looking down they tend to overestimate vertical distance. Init...
Although it is widely believed that perception must be veridical for action to be accurate, an alter...
AbstractThe presence of one or two long, dim, eccentrically-placed, parallel, pitched-from-vertical ...
AbstractLocalization within the space in front of an observer can be specified along two orthogonal ...
Some believe that palm boards are more accurate measures of perceived slope than are verbal reports....
The perceived inclination of slopes is generally overestimated. We claim that overestimation depends...
According to scale expansion theory two distinct sources of angular information are used to compute ...