Journal article

Spatial proximity rather than temporal frequency determines the wagon wheel illusion

E Levichkina, G Fedorov, C van Leeuwen

Perception | SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD | Published : 2014

Abstract

A rotating disk composed of alternating light and dark segments may give rise to the wagon wheel illusion: a perceptual reversal in rotation direction. Continuously illuminated (eg in daylight) as well as discretely presented (eg stroboscopic or computer-animated) versions of the illusion exist; here, we investigated the discrete version. Prominence of the illusion is commonly believed to depend on temporal frequency of rotation, but frequency effects have been unsystematic across previous experiments. Here, illusion strength is shown instead to lawfully depend on an attraction function of angular displacement between successive frames (experiments 1 and  2). We studied the illusion across a..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

We thank Vetrivel Lakshmanan, Denis Polygalov, and Pavel Maximov for technical help, and Ivan Pigarev, Vadim Maximov, Elena Maximova, Alexander Kaplan, Johan Wagemans, and two anonymous reviewers for constructive discussions. Cees van Leeuwen is aided by an Odysseus Grant from the Flemish Science Foundation (FWO).