
doi: 10.1068/p050343
pmid: 980676
A group of Scottish schoolchildren were tested on a task intended to measure the effect of implicit-shape constancy, and the scores were compared with those obtained from African samples. It was found that both groups were influenced by the implicit-shape constancy although the influence was less in the African sample. The relationship of these findings to other published reports of cross-cultural research into pictorial perception and susceptibility to illusions is discussed.
Cross-Cultural Comparison, Male, Scotland, Optical Illusions, Africa, Visual Perception, Humans, Female, Child
Cross-Cultural Comparison, Male, Scotland, Optical Illusions, Africa, Visual Perception, Humans, Female, Child
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