TY - JOUR
T1 - Investigation of bistable perception with the " silhouette spinner"
T2 - Sit still, spin the dancer with your will
AU - Liu, Chao Hsuan
AU - Tzeng, Ovid J.L.
AU - Hung, Daisy L.
AU - Tseng, Philip
AU - Juan, Chi Hung
N1 - Funding Information:
The author's studies were supported by grants from the European Commission (EICOSANOX Integrated Project 005033), the European Union's Seventh Framework Program (FP7/2007-2013) for the Innovative Medicine Initiative under grant agreement n° IMI/115006 (the SUMMIT consortium), and Bayer AG.
PY - 2012/5/1
Y1 - 2012/5/1
N2 - Many studies have used static and non-biologically related stimuli to investigate bistable perception and found that the percept is usually dominated by their intrinsic nature with some influence of voluntary control from the viewer. Here we used a dynamic stimulus of a rotating human body, the silhouette spinner illusion, to investigate how the viewers' intentions may affect their percepts. In two experiments, we manipulated observer intention (active or passive), fixation position (body or feet), and spinning velocity (fast, medium, or slow). Our results showed that the normalized alternating rate between two bistable percepts was greater when (1) participants actively attempted to switch percepts, (2) when participants fixated at the spinner's feet rather than the body, inducing as many as 25 switches of the bistable percepts within 1. min, and (3) when they watched the spinner at high velocity. These results suggest that a dynamic biologically-bistable percept can be quickly alternated by the viewers' intention. Furthermore, the higher alternating rate in the feet condition compared to the body condition suggests a role for biological meaningfulness in determining bistable percepts, where 'biologically plausible' interpretations are favored by the visual system.
AB - Many studies have used static and non-biologically related stimuli to investigate bistable perception and found that the percept is usually dominated by their intrinsic nature with some influence of voluntary control from the viewer. Here we used a dynamic stimulus of a rotating human body, the silhouette spinner illusion, to investigate how the viewers' intentions may affect their percepts. In two experiments, we manipulated observer intention (active or passive), fixation position (body or feet), and spinning velocity (fast, medium, or slow). Our results showed that the normalized alternating rate between two bistable percepts was greater when (1) participants actively attempted to switch percepts, (2) when participants fixated at the spinner's feet rather than the body, inducing as many as 25 switches of the bistable percepts within 1. min, and (3) when they watched the spinner at high velocity. These results suggest that a dynamic biologically-bistable percept can be quickly alternated by the viewers' intention. Furthermore, the higher alternating rate in the feet condition compared to the body condition suggests a role for biological meaningfulness in determining bistable percepts, where 'biologically plausible' interpretations are favored by the visual system.
KW - Active perception
KW - Biological plausibility
KW - Bistable motion perception
KW - Intention
KW - Voluntary control
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U2 - 10.1016/j.visres.2012.03.005
DO - 10.1016/j.visres.2012.03.005
M3 - Article
C2 - 22465540
AN - SCOPUS:84860258333
SN - 0042-6989
VL - 60
SP - 34
EP - 39
JO - Vision Research
JF - Vision Research
ER -