Understanding human perception by human-made illusions
Identifieur interne : 001D69 ( Pmc/Corpus ); précédent : 001D68; suivant : 001D70Understanding human perception by human-made illusions
Auteurs : Claus-Christian CarbonSource :
- Frontiers in Human Neuroscience [ 1662-5161 ] ; 2014.
Abstract
It may be fun to perceive illusions, but the understanding of how they work is even more stimulating and sustainable: They can tell us where the limits and capacity of our perceptual apparatus are found—they can specify how the constraints of perception are set. Furthermore, they let us analyze the cognitive sub-processes underlying our perception. Illusions in a scientific context are not mainly created to reveal the failures of our perception or the dysfunctions of our apparatus, but instead point to the specific power of human perception. The main task of human perception is to amplify and strengthen sensory inputs to be able to perceive, orientate and act very quickly, specifically and efficiently. The present paper strengthens this line of argument, strongly put forth by perceptual pioneer Richard L. Gregory (e.g., Gregory,
Url:
DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00566
PubMed: 25132816
PubMed Central: 4116780
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