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Illusion - Is Seeing Really Believing?
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Illusion - Is Seeing Really Believing (1998)(Marshall Media)[Mac-PC].iso
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00381_Field_381.txt
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1996-12-31
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38 lines
An illusion of direction of
motion that is very different
from the kinds thus far
discussed is the barber-pole
illusion. One tends to see
stripes moving down (or up),
although in fact any region on
the colored helical stripe that
curves around a barber pole is
simply rotating around the pole
and not displacing downward or
upward. In order to see this
motion veridically, however,
we would have to distinguish
some specific point on the
helix. Then we would detect its
rotation in a horizontal plane.
Without such a distinct point,
however, we have no good
information as to how the
contour of the helix is moving.
The stimulus is thoroughly
ambiguous. Under the
circumstances, we tend to
"assume" that visible parts of
the contour at time 1 are the
same as those at time 2--that is,
that these regions have the
same physical identity. In fact,
they are different because the
helix is rotating. Thus those
visible at time 1 will be
occluded by time 2. If the parts
were the same, the stripe would
have to be moving directly
downward, and that is precisely
what we perceive.