Testing the egocentric mirror-rotation hypothesis.

Standard

Testing the egocentric mirror-rotation hypothesis. / Muelenz, Cornelius; Hecht, Heiko; Gamer, Matthias.

in: SEEING PERCEIVING, Jahrgang 23, Nr. 5-6, 5-6, 2010, S. 373-383.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Muelenz, C, Hecht, H & Gamer, M 2010, 'Testing the egocentric mirror-rotation hypothesis.', SEEING PERCEIVING, Jg. 23, Nr. 5-6, 5-6, S. 373-383. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21466132?dopt=Citation>

APA

Muelenz, C., Hecht, H., & Gamer, M. (2010). Testing the egocentric mirror-rotation hypothesis. SEEING PERCEIVING, 23(5-6), 373-383. [5-6]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21466132?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Muelenz C, Hecht H, Gamer M. Testing the egocentric mirror-rotation hypothesis. SEEING PERCEIVING. 2010;23(5-6):373-383. 5-6.

Bibtex

@article{3127f62817c242ffb05768a7115c3d6e,
title = "Testing the egocentric mirror-rotation hypothesis.",
abstract = "Although observers know about the law of reflection, their intuitive understanding of spatial locations in mirrors is often erroneous. Hecht et al. (2005) proposed a two-stage mirror-rotation hypothesis to explain these misconceptions. The hypothesis involves an egocentric bias to the effect that observers behave as if the mirror surface were rotated by about 2 degrees to be more orthogonal than is the case. We test four variants of the hypothesis, which differ depending on whether the virtual world, the mirror, or both are taken to be rotated. We devised an experimental setup that allowed us to distinguish between these variants. Our results confirm that the virtual world--and only the virtual world--is being rotated. Observers had to perform a localization task, using a mirror that was either fronto-parallel or rotated opposite the direction of the predicted effect. We were thus able to compensate for the effect. The positions of objects in mirrors were perceived in accordance with the erroneous conception that the virtual world behind the mirror is slightly rotated and that the reconstruction is based on the non-rotated fronto-parallel mirror. A covert rotation of the mirror by about 2 degrees against the predicted effect was able to compensate for the placement error.",
author = "Cornelius Muelenz and Heiko Hecht and Matthias Gamer",
year = "2010",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "23",
pages = "373--383",
number = "5-6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Testing the egocentric mirror-rotation hypothesis.

AU - Muelenz, Cornelius

AU - Hecht, Heiko

AU - Gamer, Matthias

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - Although observers know about the law of reflection, their intuitive understanding of spatial locations in mirrors is often erroneous. Hecht et al. (2005) proposed a two-stage mirror-rotation hypothesis to explain these misconceptions. The hypothesis involves an egocentric bias to the effect that observers behave as if the mirror surface were rotated by about 2 degrees to be more orthogonal than is the case. We test four variants of the hypothesis, which differ depending on whether the virtual world, the mirror, or both are taken to be rotated. We devised an experimental setup that allowed us to distinguish between these variants. Our results confirm that the virtual world--and only the virtual world--is being rotated. Observers had to perform a localization task, using a mirror that was either fronto-parallel or rotated opposite the direction of the predicted effect. We were thus able to compensate for the effect. The positions of objects in mirrors were perceived in accordance with the erroneous conception that the virtual world behind the mirror is slightly rotated and that the reconstruction is based on the non-rotated fronto-parallel mirror. A covert rotation of the mirror by about 2 degrees against the predicted effect was able to compensate for the placement error.

AB - Although observers know about the law of reflection, their intuitive understanding of spatial locations in mirrors is often erroneous. Hecht et al. (2005) proposed a two-stage mirror-rotation hypothesis to explain these misconceptions. The hypothesis involves an egocentric bias to the effect that observers behave as if the mirror surface were rotated by about 2 degrees to be more orthogonal than is the case. We test four variants of the hypothesis, which differ depending on whether the virtual world, the mirror, or both are taken to be rotated. We devised an experimental setup that allowed us to distinguish between these variants. Our results confirm that the virtual world--and only the virtual world--is being rotated. Observers had to perform a localization task, using a mirror that was either fronto-parallel or rotated opposite the direction of the predicted effect. We were thus able to compensate for the effect. The positions of objects in mirrors were perceived in accordance with the erroneous conception that the virtual world behind the mirror is slightly rotated and that the reconstruction is based on the non-rotated fronto-parallel mirror. A covert rotation of the mirror by about 2 degrees against the predicted effect was able to compensate for the placement error.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 23

SP - 373

EP - 383

IS - 5-6

M1 - 5-6

ER -