
doi: 10.1068/p221075
pmid: 8041590
When extended outdoor scenes are imaged with magnification of 1 in optical, electronic, or computer-generated displays, scene features appear smaller and farther than in direct view. This has been shown to occur in various periscopic and camera-viewfinder displays outdoors in daylight. In four experiments it was found that apparent minification of the size of a planar object at a distance of 3–9 m indoors occurs in the viewfinder display of an SLR camera both in good light and in darkness with only the luminous object visible. The effect is robust and survives changes in the relationship between object luminance in the display and in direct view and occurs in the dark when subjects have no prior knowledge of room dimensions, object size or object distance. The results of a fifth experiment suggest that the effect is an instance of reduced visual size constancy consequent on elimination of cues for size, which include those for distance.
Adult, Male, Light, Optical Illusions, Distance Perception, Discrimination Learning, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Psychophysics, Humans, Attention, Female, Size Perception
Adult, Male, Light, Optical Illusions, Distance Perception, Discrimination Learning, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Psychophysics, Humans, Attention, Female, Size Perception
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