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Leonardo Bonetti

Linear perspective and framing in the vista paradox

Research output: Contribution to journal/Conference contribution in journal/Contribution to newspaperJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Linear perspective and framing in the vista paradox. / Costa, Marco; Bonetti, Leonardo.

In: Perception, Vol. 46, No. 11, 11.2017, p. 1245-1268.

Research output: Contribution to journal/Conference contribution in journal/Contribution to newspaperJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Costa, M & Bonetti, L 2017, 'Linear perspective and framing in the vista paradox', Perception, vol. 46, no. 11, pp. 1245-1268.

APA

Costa, M., & Bonetti, L. (2017). Linear perspective and framing in the vista paradox. Perception, 46(11), 1245-1268.

CBE

Costa M, Bonetti L. 2017. Linear perspective and framing in the vista paradox. Perception. 46(11):1245-1268.

MLA

Costa, Marco and Leonardo Bonetti. "Linear perspective and framing in the vista paradox". Perception. 2017, 46(11). 1245-1268.

Vancouver

Costa M, Bonetti L. Linear perspective and framing in the vista paradox. Perception. 2017 Nov;46(11):1245-1268.

Author

Costa, Marco ; Bonetti, Leonardo. / Linear perspective and framing in the vista paradox. In: Perception. 2017 ; Vol. 46, No. 11. pp. 1245-1268.

Bibtex

@article{20ab04240a664943b01905e56b46031a,
title = "Linear perspective and framing in the vista paradox",
abstract = "The vista paradox is the illusion in which an object seen through a frame appears to shrink in apparent size as the observer approaches the frame. In four studies, we tested the effect of framing and fixating on the target object. The first two studies assessed the vista paradox in a large scale naturalistic setting in which a 162.26 m long corridor was aligned to a 97.2 m high tower (1407 m away). In the first study the results showed, for each 16 m section, a mean 9.95% enlargement of the tower moving backward, and a mean 11.62% shrinking moving forward. In the second study participants had to compensate perceived width change changing the focal length of a photographic zoom lens. The results showed, for each 16 m section, a mean change in optical size of 26.37% in the experimental condition, and of 53.08% in the control condition. In the third study, we presented an identical vertical rectangle inserted within five frames differing in size. In the fourth study linear perspective was added to the images. The results showed that both frame size and linear perspective cues were critical factors for the vista paradox illusion. ",
author = "Marco Costa and Leonardo Bonetti",
year = "2017",
month = nov,
language = "English",
volume = "46",
pages = "1245--1268",
journal = "Perception",
issn = "0301-0066",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Linear perspective and framing in the vista paradox

AU - Costa, Marco

AU - Bonetti, Leonardo

PY - 2017/11

Y1 - 2017/11

N2 - The vista paradox is the illusion in which an object seen through a frame appears to shrink in apparent size as the observer approaches the frame. In four studies, we tested the effect of framing and fixating on the target object. The first two studies assessed the vista paradox in a large scale naturalistic setting in which a 162.26 m long corridor was aligned to a 97.2 m high tower (1407 m away). In the first study the results showed, for each 16 m section, a mean 9.95% enlargement of the tower moving backward, and a mean 11.62% shrinking moving forward. In the second study participants had to compensate perceived width change changing the focal length of a photographic zoom lens. The results showed, for each 16 m section, a mean change in optical size of 26.37% in the experimental condition, and of 53.08% in the control condition. In the third study, we presented an identical vertical rectangle inserted within five frames differing in size. In the fourth study linear perspective was added to the images. The results showed that both frame size and linear perspective cues were critical factors for the vista paradox illusion.

AB - The vista paradox is the illusion in which an object seen through a frame appears to shrink in apparent size as the observer approaches the frame. In four studies, we tested the effect of framing and fixating on the target object. The first two studies assessed the vista paradox in a large scale naturalistic setting in which a 162.26 m long corridor was aligned to a 97.2 m high tower (1407 m away). In the first study the results showed, for each 16 m section, a mean 9.95% enlargement of the tower moving backward, and a mean 11.62% shrinking moving forward. In the second study participants had to compensate perceived width change changing the focal length of a photographic zoom lens. The results showed, for each 16 m section, a mean change in optical size of 26.37% in the experimental condition, and of 53.08% in the control condition. In the third study, we presented an identical vertical rectangle inserted within five frames differing in size. In the fourth study linear perspective was added to the images. The results showed that both frame size and linear perspective cues were critical factors for the vista paradox illusion.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 46

SP - 1245

EP - 1268

JO - Perception

JF - Perception

SN - 0301-0066

IS - 11

ER -