4.6 Article

Differences in the Effects of Crowding on Size Perception and Grip Scaling in Densely Cluttered 3-D Scenes

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
Volume 26, Issue 1, Pages 58-69

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0956797614556776

Keywords

crowding; size perception; grasping; unconsciousness; visual periphery; cluttered scenes; radial-tangential anisotropy; open data

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Objects rarely appear in isolation in natural scenes. Although many studies have investigated how nearby objects influence perception in cluttered scenes (i.e., crowding), none has studied how nearby objects influence visually guided action. In Experiment 1, we found that participants could scale their grasp to the size of a crowded target even when they could not perceive its size, demonstrating for the first time that neurologically intact participants can use visual information that is not available to conscious report to scale their grasp to real objects in real scenes. In Experiments 2 and 3, we found that changing the eccentricity of the display and the orientation of the flankers had no effect on grasping but strongly affected perception. The differential effects of eccentricity and flanker orientation on perception and grasping show that the known differences in retinotopy between the ventral and dorsal streams are reflected in the way in which people deal with targets in cluttered scenes.

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