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Visual illusions classified

Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 1997
Visual illusions provide evidence of perceptual processes, especially the use of knowledge about objects and the working rules for seeing. The classification of phenomena is necessary for any science because it facilitates induction and deduction. The phenomena of illusions are no exception.
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Visually Induced Reorientation Illusions

Perception, 2001
It is known that rotation of a furnished room around the roll axis of erect subjects produces an illusion of 360° self-rotation in many subjects. Exposure of erect subjects to stationary tilted visual frames or rooms produces only up to 20° of illusory tilt.
I P, Howard, G, Hu
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A Halo Visual Illusion

Perception, 1977
A visual illusion consisting of transparent halos extending beyond the boundaries of rotating discs is reported. The effect can be obtained by rotating a variety of black-and-white discs at moderate speeds. It is not due solely to rods, as opposed to cones, and does not appear to be explainable in terms of intermittent stimulation of portions of ...
Rubin, DC, Rebson, DJ
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Visual illusion and action

Neuropsychologia, 1996
The role of allocentric cues on movement control was investigated in the present study. Pointing movements directed to the more distant vertex of closed and open configurations of the Muller-Lyer illusion, as well as to the vertex of control lines, were studied in four experimental conditions.
GENTILUCCI M   +4 more
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Illusions Can Warp Visual Space

Perception, 2009
Our perception of the space around us is not veridical. It has been reported that the systematic errors in our perception of visual space can be described by a reasonably well-behaving space (the resulting space is approximately projective and complies with an affine geometry).
Smeets, J.B.J., Sousa, R., Brenner, E.
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Visual illusions and neurobiology

Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2001
The complex structure of the visual system is sometimes exposed by its illusions. The historical study of systematic misperceptions, combined with a recent explosion of techniques to measure and stimulate neural activity, has provided a rich source for guiding neurobiological frameworks and experiments.
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Illusions, hallucinations, and visual snow

2021
Illusions and hallucinations are commonly encountered in both daily life and clinical practice. In this chapter, we review definitions and possible underlying mechanisms of these phenomena and then review what is known about specific conditions that are associated with them, including ophthalmic causes, migraine, epilepsy, Parkinson's disease, and ...
Clare L, Fraser, Christian J, Lueck
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Susceptibility to Visual Illusions

The Journal of Psychology, 1965
(1965). Susceptibility to Visual Illusions. The Journal of Psychology: Vol. 61, No. 1, pp. 127-143.
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Visual Illusions?

2017
Abstract The very definition of “illusion” is elusive. Various distinct ontologies are considered. The concept is tightly bound to the understanding of reality, awareness, “God’s eye,” objectivity, subjectivity, emphatic relations, and several others.
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