The size-weight illusion is well-known: if two equally heavy objects differ in size, the large one feels lighter than the small one. Most explanations for this illusion assume that because the information about the relevant attribute (weight itself) is unreliable, information about an irrelevant but correlated attribute (size) is used as well. If such reasoning is correct, one would expect that the illusion can be inverted: if size information is unreliable, weight information will be used to judge size. We explored whether such a weight-size illusion exists by asking participants to lift Styrofoam balls that were coated with glow in the dark paint. The balls (2 sizes, 3 weights) were lifted using a pulley system in complete darkness at 2 d...
\u3cp\u3eThe size-weight illusion is the phenomenon that the smaller of two equally heavy objects is...
Weight illusions--where one object feels heavier than an identically weighted counterpart--have been...
PublishedJournal ArticleThis is the author's accepted version of an article published in the Open Ac...
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...
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...
The size-weight illusion is well-known: if two equally heavy objects differ in size, the large one f...
PublishedJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tIn the size-weight illusion (SWI), a small o...
© The Author(s) 2019. In the size-weight illusion, the smaller object from two equally weighted obje...
When people judge the weight of two objects of equal mass but different size, they perceive the smal...
Published onlineJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tBACKGROUND: Our expectations of an ob...
An important part of the literature on the size-weight illusion ascribes great importance to expecta...
\u3cp\u3eThe size-weight illusion is the phenomenon that the smaller of two equally heavy objects is...
Weight illusions--where one object feels heavier than an identically weighted counterpart--have been...
PublishedJournal ArticleThis is the author's accepted version of an article published in the Open Ac...
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...
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...
The size-weight illusion is well-known: if two equally heavy objects differ in size, the large one f...
PublishedJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tIn the size-weight illusion (SWI), a small o...
© The Author(s) 2019. In the size-weight illusion, the smaller object from two equally weighted obje...
When people judge the weight of two objects of equal mass but different size, they perceive the smal...
Published onlineJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tBACKGROUND: Our expectations of an ob...
An important part of the literature on the size-weight illusion ascribes great importance to expecta...
\u3cp\u3eThe size-weight illusion is the phenomenon that the smaller of two equally heavy objects is...
Weight illusions--where one object feels heavier than an identically weighted counterpart--have been...
PublishedJournal ArticleThis is the author's accepted version of an article published in the Open Ac...