Journal article
Visual Perception Principles in Constellation Creation
BA Kelly, C Kemp, DR Little, D Hamacher, SJ Cropper
Topics in Cognitive Science | WILEY | Published : 2024
DOI: 10.1111/tops.12720
Abstract
Many cultures share common constellations and common narratives about the stars in the night sky. Previous research has shown that this overlap in asterisms, minimal star groupings inside constellations, is clearly present across 27 distinct culture groups and can be explained in part by properties of individual stars (brightness) and properties of pairs of stars (proximity) (Kemp, Hamacher, Little, & Cropper, 2022). The same work, however, found no evidence that properties of triples (angle) and quadruples (good continuation) predicted constellation formation. We developed a behavioral experiment to explore how individuals form constellations under conditions that reduce cultural learning. ..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
We acknowledge the Indigenous custodians of the traditional astronomical knowledge used in this article. We thank Chris Kelly at Working Gears, for his support in developing the Star Stories data-gathering tool used in this paper. This work was supported in part by Australian Research Council Grants FT190100200, DE140101600, and DP160102360, the McCoy Seed Fund, the Laby Foundation, the Pierce Bequest, the Indigenous Knowledges Institute at the University of Melbourne, and a seed grant from The Royal Society of Victoria.