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Journal Article

Citation

Meyer GE, Dougherty T. J. Exp. Psychol. Hum. Percept. Perform. 1987; 13(3): 353-360.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, Lewis and Clark College, Portland, Oregon 97219.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1987, American Psychological Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

2958584

Abstract

Two experiments examined the dependence of illusory colors on boundary salience and depth stratification by using flicker-induced depth. The first used a subjective-contour stimulus that appeared as a translucent colored rectangle covering a set of inducing circles and a dark background. The circles were then flickered so as to be perceived as background, and the previously dark background moved forward and appeared as foreground. Simultaneously, the chromatic subjective contour was eliminated. In the second experiment, a subjective-contour (faces/vase-concentric squares) figure was tinted with the McCollough effect, which produced a strong subjective color edge. This edge was visible only with the faces/vase percept and not in the squares percept. Flickering the target locked it into the square configuration because in this case the flicker held the entire pattern in the same depth plane. This eliminated the subjective color edge. Depth stratification and subjective color blockage were maximal at a flicker rate of 6 Hz.


Language: en

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