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Similarly oriented objects appear more numerous

Nicholas K. DeWind, Michael Bonner, Elizabeth M. Brannon

2020Journal of Vision37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Several non-numerical factors influence the numerical estimation of visual arrays, including the spacing of items and whether they are arranged randomly or symmetrically. Here we report a novel numerosity illusion we term the coherence illusion. When items in an array have a coherent orientation (all pointing in the same direction) they seem to be more numerous than when items are oriented randomly. Participants show parametric effects of orientation coherence in three distinct numerical judgment tasks. These findings are not predicted by any current model of numerical estimation. We discuss array entropy as a possible framework for explaining both the coherence illusion and the previously reported regular-random illusion.

Topics & Concepts

Numerosity adaptation effectIllusionCoherence (philosophical gambling strategy)Parametric statisticsOrientation (vector space)Computer scienceOptical illusionCognitive psychologyComputer simulationArtificial intelligenceMathematicsComputer visionPsychologyStatisticsSimulationPerceptionGeometryNeuroscienceCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skillsVisual perception and processing mechanisms
Similarly oriented objects appear more numerous | Litcius