Apparent rotation and jazzing in Leviant's Enigma illusion

被引:13
|
作者
Hamburger, Kai
机构
[1] Univ Giessen, Dept Expt Psychol, D-35394 Giessen, Germany
[2] Univ Hosp Freiburg, Brain Res Unit, Dept Neurol, D-79106 Freiburg, Germany
关键词
D O I
10.1068/p5542
中图分类号
R77 [眼科学];
学科分类号
100212 ;
摘要
In 1981 Leviant devised Enigma, a figure that elicits perceived rotary motion in the absence of real motion. However, despite its striking appearance there is no good explanation for this motion illusion to date. Gregory (1993 Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 253 123) pointed out a similarity to MacKay's 'complementary' afterimage in his ray pattern and suggested accommodative fluctuations and small eye movements as a potential origin for these phenomena. Furthermore, Zeki et al (1993 Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 252 215-222) found PET-activation in response to Enigma in visual area V5 and immediately surrounding areas (called V5 complex) suggesting that the illusory motion could be mediated by the same neurons as real motion. In the experiments reported here, I show that the rotary motion is perceived on coloured as well as achromatic annuli intercepting the radial lines. More importantly, the illusory streaming motion continues to be seen with a cycloplegic lens as well as through a pinhole fie ruling out transient changes of accommodation), and in the positive afterimage (ie in the absence of eye movements). Apparent rotation is strongest with radial inducers impinging at right angles onto the annuli, but persist, although to a lesser degree, when the inducing lines are tilted in opposite directions, non-collinear, or replaced by dotted lines or lines with rounded terminators. For an explanation, the Enigma illusion requires a neural mechanism that uses lines abutting an empty annulus to elicit orthogonal streaming motion in one or the other direction.
引用
收藏
页码:797 / 807
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Footstep Illusion Art: Apparent Rotation Generated by Pure Translation
    Ono, J.
    Tomoeda, A.
    Sugihara, K.
    PERCEPTION, 2013, 42 : 101 - 101
  • [2] Illusory rotation of superimposed elements in terms of the Pinna illusion and apparent motion
    Ichikawa, M.
    Masakura, Y.
    PERCEPTION, 2014, 43 (01) : 20 - 20
  • [3] The Lady's not for turning: Rotation of the Thatcher illusion
    Lewis, MB
    PERCEPTION, 2001, 30 (06) : 769 - 774
  • [4] The relative motion aftereffect in the Enigma illusion
    Tomimatsu, E.
    Ito, H.
    PERCEPTION, 2012, 41 : 91 - 91
  • [5] Jazzing up RN's job
    Thrall, TH
    HOSPITALS & HEALTH NETWORKS, 2005, 79 (08): : 16 - 16
  • [6] The freezing rotation illusion
    Duersteler, Max R.
    USING EYE MOVEMENTS AS AN EXPERIMENTAL PROBE OF BRAIN FUNCTION - A SYMPOSIUM IN HONOR OF JEAN BUTTNER-ENNEVER, 2008, 171 : 283 - 285
  • [7] The apparent illusion of conscious deciding
    Shepherd, Joshua
    PHILOSOPHICAL EXPLORATIONS, 2013, 16 (01) : 18 - 30
  • [8] Reversal of apparent rotation in the Enigma-figure with and without motion adaptation and the effect of T-junctions
    Gori, Simone
    Hamburger, Kai
    Spillmann, Lothar
    VISION RESEARCH, 2006, 46 (19) : 3267 - 3273
  • [9] ILLUSION OF THE APPARENT IDENTITY OF AN OBJECT
    BOUDREAU, G
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 1992, 27 (06) : 459 - 475
  • [10] An apparent motion color illusion
    van Lier, Rob
    Hazenberg, Simon J.
    Ekroll, Vebjorn
    I-PERCEPTION, 2024, 15 (04):