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Orientation and experience in the perception of form : a study with the Arizona whale-kangaroo / John F. Kihlstrom, Mary A. Peterson, Kevin M. McConkey, Jacquelyn Cranney, Martha L. Glisky, Patricia M. Rose

By: Series: The American Journal of Psychology. 131 : 2, page 129-139 Publication details: Summer 2018.Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
Subject(s): Summary: When subjects are presented with the Arizona whale-kangaroo, an ambiguous figure, perception of the whale is more common than perception of the kangaroo. However, this difference is smaller in Australian than American subjects. Perception of the kangaroo is more orientation dependent than perception of the whale, which is perceived at all orientations of the stimulus. Together with the difference between subject populations, this effect reveals an influence of past experience on the perception of this new ambiguous figure. Perception of the whale versus the kangaroo differs in both reconstrual of parts and realignment of the object-centered reference frame. Observers report reference frame reconstruals before reference frame reversals, shedding light on the organization of object memory.
Item type: Articles
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When subjects are presented with the Arizona whale-kangaroo, an ambiguous figure, perception of the whale is more common than perception of the kangaroo. However, this difference is smaller in Australian than American subjects. Perception of the kangaroo is more orientation dependent than perception of the whale, which is perceived at all orientations of the stimulus. Together with the difference between subject populations, this effect reveals an influence of past experience on the perception of this new ambiguous figure. Perception of the whale versus the kangaroo differs in both reconstrual of parts and realignment of the object-centered reference frame. Observers report reference frame reconstruals before reference frame reversals, shedding light on the organization of object memory.

Psychology.

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