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Form Perception without Attention

Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1976
Methods were devised which made it possible for subjects to look directly at novel forms without attending to them. In one method a state of inattention was achieved without the use of distracting or competing material whereas in a second method the subjects selectively attended to one series of moving figures rather than another simultaneously ...
I, Rock, R, Schauer, F, Halper
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Attentional Biases in Geometric form Perception

The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A, 2000
This paper reports the operation of robust attentional bias to the top and right during perception of small, single geometric forms. Same/different judgements of successively presented standard and comparison forms are faster when local differences are located at top and right rather than in other regions of the forms. The bias persists when form size
C, Latimer   +3 more
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Visual form perception

Contemporary Physics, 1975
Abstract This article deals with the way in which vertebrate, and in particular primate, visual systems are organized for the detection of spatially distributed light stimuli, i.e. for form perception. The principles of this organization are of concern to physicists who design and employ pattern recognition machines for various purposes, as well as to ...
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Body Locus and Form Perception

Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1977
Forms were drawn on the palms, forearms, or biceps of 42 subjects, with vision excluded. Subjects were then required to make a visual match to the drawn forms. It was expected that the accuracy of form recognition would be a direct function of the sensitivity of the receptor surface.
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Visually Induced Tilt Affects Form Perception

Perception, 1981
A large visually moving field, which induces a sensation of tilting, affects the perception of form with virtually no change in the orientation of the retinal image. This effect is both quantitatively and qualitatively different from the effect of the induced tilt on a vertical line, suggesting a higher-order visual-vestibular interaction.
P J, McAdie, M J, Steinbach
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Nonvisual Components in Visual Form Perception

Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1964
Since certain curvature aftereffects require active movements during prismatic adaptation, non-visual components must affect some (but not all) visual shape perception.
J, HOCHBERG, R, HELD
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