Deconfounded and mixed-symmetry versions of the Ponzo illusion figure

Vision Res. 2023 Jan:202:108143. doi: 10.1016/j.visres.2022.108143. Epub 2022 Nov 5.

Abstract

One of the original Ponzo illusion figures, which consists of two converging lines between which two parallel lines of similar length have been inserted orthogonal to the figure's axis of mirror symmetry, was itself mirror-reflected so that the overall shape of the figure became "< >" or "> <", and one line at a time was inserted into each half. The usual illusion - the overestimation of the length of a line that is nearer to a vertex than a farther-away comparison line - occurred. Experiments 1 and 2 used different distances of target and comparison lines to the vertices, but identical distances of these lines from the converging lines, and so, as a tandem, deconfounded the two variables. Experiments 3 and 4 changed the symmetries of the modified Ponzo figure by reducing opposing half-angles of the converging lines or by tilting target and comparison lines concordantly or discordantly. The first measure, which created unequal distances of the endpoints of the target and comparison lines from the converging lines, hardly affected the amount of illusion. The second measure often attenuated the illusion - equally so for concordant and discordant tilts - suggesting that global and local symmetries of the stimuli, and their accordance, were less important than the vertical versus oblique orientation of target and comparison lines. Descriptively, the main cause of the Ponzo illusion seems to be the size of the gap between target and converging lines. The neural substrate of the effect may be interactions between orientation-sensitive and end-inhibited neurons.

Keywords: Confounded variables; Neural interactions; Symmetry; Visual illusions.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Illusions*
  • Neurons
  • Optical Illusions* / physiology