Reversed Phi and the “Phenomenal Phenomena” Revisited

Reversed apparent motion (or reversed phi) can be seen during a continuous dissolve between a positive and a spatially shifted negative version of the same image. Similar reversed effects can be seen in stereo when positive and spatially shifted negative images are presented separately to the two ey...

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Main Authors: Brian Rogers, Stuart Anstis, Hiroshi Ashida, Akiyoshi Kitaoka
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-07-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669519856906
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spelling doaj-aeee15d08eb14c16bfa692af8cac7c342020-11-25T03:19:51ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952019-07-011010.1177/2041669519856906Reversed Phi and the “Phenomenal Phenomena” RevisitedBrian RogersStuart AnstisHiroshi AshidaAkiyoshi KitaokaReversed apparent motion (or reversed phi) can be seen during a continuous dissolve between a positive and a spatially shifted negative version of the same image. Similar reversed effects can be seen in stereo when positive and spatially shifted negative images are presented separately to the two eyes or in a Vernier alignment task when the two images are juxtaposed one above the other. Gregory and Heard reported similar effects that they called “phenomenal phenomena.” Here, we investigate the similarities between these different effects and put forward a simple, spatial-smoothing explanation that can account for both the direction and magnitude of the reversed effects in the motion, stereo and Vernier domains. In addition, we consider whether the striking motion effects seen when viewing Kitaoka’s colour-dependent Fraser-Wilcox figures are related to the reversed phi illusion, given the similarity of the luminance profiles.https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669519856906
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brian Rogers
Stuart Anstis
Hiroshi Ashida
Akiyoshi Kitaoka
spellingShingle Brian Rogers
Stuart Anstis
Hiroshi Ashida
Akiyoshi Kitaoka
Reversed Phi and the “Phenomenal Phenomena” Revisited
i-Perception
author_facet Brian Rogers
Stuart Anstis
Hiroshi Ashida
Akiyoshi Kitaoka
author_sort Brian Rogers
title Reversed Phi and the “Phenomenal Phenomena” Revisited
title_short Reversed Phi and the “Phenomenal Phenomena” Revisited
title_full Reversed Phi and the “Phenomenal Phenomena” Revisited
title_fullStr Reversed Phi and the “Phenomenal Phenomena” Revisited
title_full_unstemmed Reversed Phi and the “Phenomenal Phenomena” Revisited
title_sort reversed phi and the “phenomenal phenomena” revisited
publisher SAGE Publishing
series i-Perception
issn 2041-6695
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Reversed apparent motion (or reversed phi) can be seen during a continuous dissolve between a positive and a spatially shifted negative version of the same image. Similar reversed effects can be seen in stereo when positive and spatially shifted negative images are presented separately to the two eyes or in a Vernier alignment task when the two images are juxtaposed one above the other. Gregory and Heard reported similar effects that they called “phenomenal phenomena.” Here, we investigate the similarities between these different effects and put forward a simple, spatial-smoothing explanation that can account for both the direction and magnitude of the reversed effects in the motion, stereo and Vernier domains. In addition, we consider whether the striking motion effects seen when viewing Kitaoka’s colour-dependent Fraser-Wilcox figures are related to the reversed phi illusion, given the similarity of the luminance profiles.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669519856906
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