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Determinants of the rod-and-frame effect: Role of organization and subjective contour
Authors:Michael J. Streibel  Richard D. Barnes  George D. Julness  Sheldon M. Ebenholtz
Affiliation:1. Department of Curriculum and Instruction, University of Wisconsin, 53706, Madison, Wisconsin
2. Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin, 53706, Madison, Wisconsin
Abstract:In Experiment 1, performance on a conventional (full) rod and frame was compared with that on three other displays. These included a closure condition in which only the corners of a luminous frame were present, a subjective contour condition in which the rod was seen against ablack square subjective surface, and a pattern condition in which four luminous disks were arranged to form the corners of a square pattern. In all cases, a square-like form was perceived. The rod-and-frame effect (RFE) was greatest on the full frame, which differed significantly from all the rest. Closure produced the next greatest influence, while the responses to subjective and pattern conditions did not differ from each other. Experiment 2 showed that a subjective frame was no more effective than the subjective surface of Experiment 1, and verified the importance of 90-deg corner elements in the rod-and-frame display. The conclusion drawn was that equivalent form organizations are not sufficient to produce equivalent levels of the RFE, but certain luminance-difference contours appear to be essential.
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