Evolved navigation theory and horizontal visual illusions |
| |
Authors: | Jackson Russell E Willey Chéla R |
| |
Affiliation: | Psychology Department, California State University San Marcos, United States |
| |
Abstract: | Environmental perception is prerequisite to most vertebrate behavior and its modern investigation initiated the founding of experimental psychology. Navigation costs may affect environmental perception, such as overestimating distances while encumbered (Solomon, 1949). However, little is known about how this occurs in real-world navigation or how it may have evolved. We manipulated the most commonly navigated surfaces with a non-intuitive cost derived from evolved navigation theory. Observers in realistic settings unknowingly overestimated horizontal distances that contained a risk of falling and did so by the relative degree of falling risk. This manipulation produced previously unknown, large magnitude illusions in everyday vision in the environments most commonly navigated by humans. These results bear upon predictions from multiple fundamental theories of visual cognition. |
| |
Keywords: | Distance perception Evolution Evolved navigation theory Illusion Navigation |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect PubMed 等数据库收录! |