The illusion of clarity: Image segmentation and edge attribution without filling-in |
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Authors: | Daniel Smilek Mark I Rempel James T Enns |
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Institution: | 1. University of Waterloo , Waterloo, ON, Canada dsmilek@watarts.uwaterloo.ca;3. University of British Columbia , Vancouver, BC, Canada |
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Abstract: | It comes as no surprise that viewing a high-resolution photograph through a screen reduces its clarity. Yet when a coarsely quantized (i.e., pixelated) version of the same photo is seen through a screen its clarity is increased. Six experiments investigated this illusion of clarity. First, the illusion was quantified by having participants rate the clarity of quantized images with and without a screen (Experiment 1). Interestingly, the illusion occurs both when the wires of the screen are aligned with the blocks of the quantized image and when they are shifted horizontally and vertically (Experiments 2 and 3), casting doubt on the hypothesis that a local filling-in process is involved. The finding that no illusion occurs when the photo is blurred rather than quantized (Experiment 4) and that the illusion is sharply reduced when visual attention is divided (Experiment 5) argue for an image segmentation process that falsely attributes the edges of the quantized blocks to the screen. Finally, the illusion is larger when participants adopt an active rather than a passive cognitive strategy (Experiment 6), pointing to the importance of cognitive control in the illusion. |
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Keywords: | Visual search Object perception Visual attention Configural asymmetries |
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