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Showing papers by "J. Farley Norman published in 2010"



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A recreated experiment to empirically evaluate the beauty of rectangles using more naturalistic stimuli and finds that subjects prefer either very simple or very complex objects runs contrary to the hypothesized results, but are systematic none the less.
Abstract: Gustav Fechner is widely respected as a founding father of experimental psychology and psychophysics but fewer know of his interests and work in empirical aesthetics In the later 1800s, toward the end of his career, Fechner performed experiments to empirically evaluate the beauty of rectangles, hypothesizing that the preferred shape would closely match that of the so-called 'golden rectangle' His findings confirmed his suspicions, but in the intervening decades there has been significant evidence pointing away from that finding Regardless of the results of this one study, Fechner ushered in the notion of using a metric to evaluate beauty in a psychophysical way In this paper, we recreate the experiment using more naturalistic stimuli We evaluate subjects' preferences against models that use various types of object complexity as metrics Our findings that subjects prefer either very simple or very complex objects runs contrary to the hypothesized results, but are systematic none the less We conclude that there are likely to be useful measures of aesthetic preference but they are likely to be complicated by the difficulty in defining some of their constituent parts

35 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Here it is reported on a direct empirical test of the existence of planes in monocular visual space for a group of sixteen experienced observers, finding that the generic population might well be inhomogeneous with respect to the structure of visual space.

19 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Modulatory effects of a surround upon the perceived speed of a moving central region are investigated, showing that the perceived speeds of older adults are different: older observers generally perceive nearer targets as faster both when center and surround move in the same direction and when they move in opposite directions.

16 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that accurate global shape discrimination survives a considerable amount of retinal blur and is facilitated by the objects’ rotation in depth, regardless of the presence or absence of blur.
Abstract: A single experiment evaluated observers' ability to visually discriminate 3-D object shape, where the 3-D structure was defined by motion, texture, Lambertian shading, and occluding contours. The observers' vision was degraded to varying degrees by blurring the experimental stimuli, using 2.0-, 2.5-, and 3.0-diopter convex lenses. The lenses reduced the observers' acuity from -0.091 LogMAR (in the no-blur conditions) to 0.924 LogMAR (in the conditions with the most blur; 3.0-diopter lenses). This visual degradation, although producing severe reductions in visual acuity, had only small (but significant) effects on the observers' ability to discriminate 3-D shape. The observers' shape discrimination performance was facilitated by the objects' rotation in depth, regardless of the presence or absence of blur. Our results indicate that accurate global shape discrimination survives a considerable amount of retinal blur.

11 citations


Journal ArticleDOI

9 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated modulatory effects of a surround upon the perceived speed of a moving central region and found that older adults perceived nearer targets as faster both when center and surround move in the same direction and when they move in opposite directions.
Abstract: Two experiments investigated modulatory effects of a surround upon the perceived speed of a moving central region. Both the surround’s depth and velocity (relative to the center) were manipulated. The abilities of younger observers (mean age was 23.1 years) were evaluated in Experiment 1, while Experiment 2 was devoted to older participants (mean age was 71.3 years). The results of Experiment 1 revealed that changes in the perceived depth of a surround (in this case caused by changes in binocular disparity) significantly influence the perceived speed of a central target. In particular, the center’s motion was perceived as fastest when the surround possessed uncrossed binocular disparity relative to the central target. This effect, that targets that are closer than their background are perceived to be faster, only occurred when the center and surround moved in the same directions (and did not occur when center and surround moved in opposite directions). The results of Experiment 2 showed that the perceived speeds of older adults are different: older observers generally perceive nearer targets as faster both when center and surround move in the same direction and when they move in opposite directions. In addition, the older observers’ judgments of speed were less precise. These age-related changes in the perception of speed are broadly consistent with the results of recent neurophysiological investigations that find age-related changes in the functionality of cortical area MT.

4 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the extent to which observers can "discount" the distorting effects of curved background surfaces has been investigated, and the results showed that the discrimination of 3D object shape from cast shadows was generally invariant over the distortions produced by hemispherical background surfaces.
Abstract: In a natural environment, cast shadows abound. Objects cast shadows both upon themselves and upon background surfaces. Previous research on the perception of 3-D shape from cast shadows has only examined the informativeness of shadows cast upon flat background surfaces. In outdoor environments, however, background surfaces often possess significant curvature (large rocks, trees, hills, etc.), and this background curvature distorts the shape of cast shadows. The purpose of this study was to determine the extent to which observers can "discount" the distorting effects of curved background surfaces. In our experiments, observers viewed deforming or static shadows of naturally shaped objects, which were cast upon flat and curved background surfaces. The results showed that the discrimination of 3-D object shape from cast shadows was generally invariant over the distortions produced by hemispherical background surfaces. The observers often had difficulty, however, in identifying the shadows cast onto saddle-shaped background surfaces. The variations in curvature which occur in different directions on saddle-shaped background surfaces cause shadow distortions that lead to difficulties in object recognition and discrimination.

3 citations