International audienceThe development of visual context effects in the Ebbinghaus illusion in the United Kingdom and in remote and urban Namibians (UN) was investigated (N = 336). Remote traditional Himba children showed no illusion up until 9–10 years, whereas UK children showed a robust illusion from 7 to 8 years of age. Greater illusion in UK than in traditional Himba children was stable from 9 to 10 years to adulthood. A lesser illusion was seen in remote traditional Himba children than in UN children growing up in the nearest town to the traditional Himba villages across age groups. We conclude that cross‐cultural differences in perceptual biases to process visual context emerge in early childhood and are influenced by the urban enviro...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>The principal objective is to examine alternatives f...
International audienceCitation: Knol H, Huys R, Sarrazin J-C and Jirsa VK (2015) Quantifying the Ebb...
This research explores the differences between optical illusion susceptibility, personal space comfo...
International audienceThe development of visual context effects in the Ebbinghaus illusion in the Un...
We investigated the development of visual context effects in the Ebbinghaus illusion across UK peopl...
There is substantial evidence that populations in the Western world exhibit a local bias compared to...
There is substantial evidence that populations in the Western world exhibit a local bias compared to...
International audienceThe Ebbinghaus (Titchener) illusion was examined in a remote culture (Himba) w...
International audienceIn 1977, Navon argued that perception is biased towards the processing of glob...
International audienceIn Experiment 1, a normal adult population drawn from a remote culture (Himba)...
Cognitive processes differ markedly between children from different cultures, with best evidence for...
Cognitive processes differ markedly between children from different cultures, with best evidence for...
The sensitivity of size perception to context has been used to distinguish between ‘vision for actio...
It has been argued that humans’ susceptibility to visual illusions does not simply reflect cognitive...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>The principal objective is to examine alternatives f...
International audienceCitation: Knol H, Huys R, Sarrazin J-C and Jirsa VK (2015) Quantifying the Ebb...
This research explores the differences between optical illusion susceptibility, personal space comfo...
International audienceThe development of visual context effects in the Ebbinghaus illusion in the Un...
We investigated the development of visual context effects in the Ebbinghaus illusion across UK peopl...
There is substantial evidence that populations in the Western world exhibit a local bias compared to...
There is substantial evidence that populations in the Western world exhibit a local bias compared to...
International audienceThe Ebbinghaus (Titchener) illusion was examined in a remote culture (Himba) w...
International audienceIn 1977, Navon argued that perception is biased towards the processing of glob...
International audienceIn Experiment 1, a normal adult population drawn from a remote culture (Himba)...
Cognitive processes differ markedly between children from different cultures, with best evidence for...
Cognitive processes differ markedly between children from different cultures, with best evidence for...
The sensitivity of size perception to context has been used to distinguish between ‘vision for actio...
It has been argued that humans’ susceptibility to visual illusions does not simply reflect cognitive...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>The principal objective is to examine alternatives f...
International audienceCitation: Knol H, Huys R, Sarrazin J-C and Jirsa VK (2015) Quantifying the Ebb...
This research explores the differences between optical illusion susceptibility, personal space comfo...