The sensitivity of size perception to context has been used to distinguish between ‘vision for action’ and ‘vision for perception’, and to study cultural, psychopathological, and developmental differences in perception. The status of that evidence is much debated, however. Here we use a rigorous double dissociation paradigm based on the Ebbinghaus illusion, and find that for children below 7 years of age size discrimination is much less affected by surround size. Young children are less accurate than adults when context is helpful, but more accurate when context is misleading. Even by the age of 10 years context-sensitivity is still not at adult levels. Therefore, size-contrast as shown by the Ebbinghaus illusion is not a built-in property ...
AbstractWe examined the effect of visual experience on the magnitude of a novel eye-size illusion: w...
The information about what one can see and what other people can see from different viewpoints is im...
A remarkable feature of the human visual system is that it is possible to extrapolate a large amount...
We investigated the development of visual context effects in the Ebbinghaus illusion across UK peopl...
Background: Studies reporting altered susceptibility to visual illusions in autistic individuals com...
Background: Studies reporting altered susceptibility to visual illusions in autistic individuals com...
Background Studies reporting altered susceptibility to visual illusions in autistic individuals com...
Visual size perception is highly context-dependent. In a series of experiments reported here, we dem...
Context sensitivity of size perception has previously been used to study individual differences rela...
International audienceCitation: Knol H, Huys R, Sarrazin J-C and Jirsa VK (2015) Quantifying the Ebb...
There is evidence that East Asian cultures have more context-sensitive styles of reasoning, memory, ...
In the Ebbinghaus illusion, the context surrounding an object modulates its subjectively perceived s...
This paper tests the hypothesis that social presence influences size perception by increasing contex...
This paper tests the hypothesis that social presence influences size perception by increas-ing conte...
In the Ebbinghaus illusion, the context surrounding an object modulates its subjectively perceived s...
AbstractWe examined the effect of visual experience on the magnitude of a novel eye-size illusion: w...
The information about what one can see and what other people can see from different viewpoints is im...
A remarkable feature of the human visual system is that it is possible to extrapolate a large amount...
We investigated the development of visual context effects in the Ebbinghaus illusion across UK peopl...
Background: Studies reporting altered susceptibility to visual illusions in autistic individuals com...
Background: Studies reporting altered susceptibility to visual illusions in autistic individuals com...
Background Studies reporting altered susceptibility to visual illusions in autistic individuals com...
Visual size perception is highly context-dependent. In a series of experiments reported here, we dem...
Context sensitivity of size perception has previously been used to study individual differences rela...
International audienceCitation: Knol H, Huys R, Sarrazin J-C and Jirsa VK (2015) Quantifying the Ebb...
There is evidence that East Asian cultures have more context-sensitive styles of reasoning, memory, ...
In the Ebbinghaus illusion, the context surrounding an object modulates its subjectively perceived s...
This paper tests the hypothesis that social presence influences size perception by increasing contex...
This paper tests the hypothesis that social presence influences size perception by increas-ing conte...
In the Ebbinghaus illusion, the context surrounding an object modulates its subjectively perceived s...
AbstractWe examined the effect of visual experience on the magnitude of a novel eye-size illusion: w...
The information about what one can see and what other people can see from different viewpoints is im...
A remarkable feature of the human visual system is that it is possible to extrapolate a large amount...