Preservation of Emmert's law in a visual form agnosic.
نویسنده
چکیده
Size constancy was investigated in DF, a patient with visual form agnosia, using a technique based on Emmert's law of visual after-images. DF was first given a task in which she was asked to indicate the distance of a vertical surface and a task where she had to estimate the width of a series of squares (widths ranging from 5 cm to 35 cm) placed at varying distances and having a constant visual angle. In the distance estimation task, DF greatly overestimated the distance of the vertical surface placed in front of her. DF also had great difficulty performing the size estimation task. DF then performed a task in which she stared at a bright 5 cm square for a brief period of time at a distance of 30 cm followed by the presentation of a vertical surface which varied in distance and was asked to indicate the width of the after-image either verbally or manually. DF's after-images conformed to the size-distance relationship predicted by Emmert's law--as the distance of the vertical surface increased her perception of the size of the after-images also increased. These data demonstrate that although DF is rather impaired in tasks that require explicit estimates of size and distance, at some level, DF must have relatively intact size constancy mechanisms given that her estimates of the width of the after-image conform to Emmert's law. Thus, the processes underlying explicit judgements of size and distance appear to differ from those underlying the size and distance scaling of after-images.
منابع مشابه
Emmert's Law and the moon illusion.
A cognitive account is offered of puzzling, though well known phenomena, including increased size of afterimages with greater distance (Emmert's Law) and increased size of the moon near the horizon (the Moon Illusion). Various classical distortion illusions are explained by Size Scaling when inappropriate to distance, 'flipping' depth ambiguity being used to separate botton-up and top-down visu...
متن کاملAn empirical test of formal equivalence between Emmert's law and the size-distance invariance hypothesis.
Emmert's law and the size-distance invariance hypothesis have been said to be formally equivalent, provided that Emmert's law means that the perceived size of an afterimage is proportional to the perceived distance of the projected surface of the afterimage. However, there have been very few studies that have attempted to verify this formal equivalence empirically. We measured both the perceive...
متن کاملMoon Illusion and Emmert's Law.
The perceived size of an afterimage varies with the part of the sky to which it is projected in a manner predictable from Emmert's Law and the appearance of the sky as a flattened dome. This effect is directly analogous to the moon illusion.
متن کاملEmmert's law in the dark: active and passive proprioceptive effects on positive visual afterimages.
The relationship between apparent size and apparent distance is given by Emmert's law, which states that a retinal image is proportional in size to the distance of the surface it is projected upon. This principle also applies to retinal afterimages in that they, too, will change in apparent size if distance cues suggest that the location of the object onto the retinal image has been altered. It...
متن کاملPreserved implicit form perception and orientation adaptation in visual form agnosia.
Visual form agnosia is mainly characterized by profound deficits in visual form and shape discrimination. Previous studies have shown that patients retain the capacity for coordinated motor behaviors, color naming and implicit letter perception. However, it is unknown to what extent other visual functions, such as implicit form and orientation perception, are preserved. To address these questio...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Neurocase
دوره 12 2 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2006