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Journal Article

Citation

Kavšek M, Granrud CE. Iperception 2012; 3(7): 459-466.

Affiliation

Department of Developmental and Educational Psychology, Institute of Psychology, University of Bonn, Kaiser-Karl Ring 9, 53111 Bonn, Germany; e-mail: kavsek@uni-bonn.de.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1068/i0530

PMID

23145297

PMCID

PMC3485840

Abstract

This study tested the perceptual learning theory of size constancy development, which proposes that children younger than 9 years are relatively insensitive to monocular cues for distance and size, and that developmental changes in far-distance size estimation result from increasing sensitivity to these cues. This theory predicts that before 10 years, children will make less accurate size judgments at far distances under monocular than under binocular viewing conditions. Five age groups were tested: 5-6, 7-8, 9-10, 19-28, and 50+ years. Participants judged the size of a standard disc, from viewing distances of 6.1 and 61 m, by pointing at 1 of 9 nearby comparison discs. Testing was conducted under both monocular and binocular viewing conditions. Five- to 6-year-olds underestimated object size at the far distance, 7- to 8-, 9- to 10-year-olds, and older adults made size estimates that were close to accurate, and the young adults significantly overestimated size. At the near distance, all age groups underestimated size and no age differences were found. Contrary to predictions from the perceptual learning theory, viewing condition had no significant effect on size estimates.


Language: en

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