16:30 - 18:00
Parallel sessions 3
16:30 - 18:00
What Illusions Tell Us About How Perception Works
Room: HSZ - N5
Chair/s:
Elisabeth Hein
In order to perceive and meaningfully interact with the world around us, our sensory systems need to interpret the incoming information. This interpretation process is well illustrated in the case of illusions. With some illusions we perceive very different things in one and same input, as for example in the famous Necker cube or “The dress”, which can be seen blue and black or white and golden. Other illusions make us perceive colors where there are none, as in the watercolor illusion, or cause-and-effect relationships and animacy with simple dots. Therefore, illusions are a wonderful tool to understand more about how perception works. In the symposium, we will look at this question using a variety of different experimental methods and very different illusions in order to learn more about different aspects of perception ranging from auditory motion perception to robotic vision. In particular, in the first talk Meike Kriegeskorte and colleagues will use auditory apparent motion to investigate which factors influence how object correspondence is established, i.e. object identity is perceived despite changes in location across time. In the second talk Shalila Freitag and colleagues will talk about EEG correlates of perceptual (un-)certainty and the role of stimulus predictability when participants observe stimuli with varying degree of ambiguity/visibility (Necker lattices and smiley faces). In the third talk Ben Sommer and colleagues will investigate perceived causality in a paradigm in which a disc can either be perceived as launching another disc or as passing across the other disc. In particular, they use visual adaptation to look at the influence of a launch or pass context on an ambiguous display. In the fourth talk Vebjørn Ekroll will use examples of magic tricks around the illusion of absence that work better than one would expect based on the method of the trick and how perception works. In the last talk Aravind Rao Battaje and colleagues will present work on whether robotic perceptual models could predict population-level and individual human responses to visual illusions, using the example of the fill-in color aftereffect and Silencing by motion.
SymposiumTalk-01
Meike Kriegeskorte, University of Tübingen, Germany
SymposiumTalk-02
Shalila Freitag, Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Germany | Perception and Cognition Lab, Institute for Frontier Areas of Psychology and Mental Health, Freiburg, Germany | Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Medical Center, University of Freiburg, Germany | Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg, Germany
SymposiumTalk-03
Ben Sommer, Humboldt-University, Berlin, Germany
SymposiumTalk-04
Vebjørn Ekroll, Department of Psychosocial Science, University of Bergen, Norway
SymposiumTalk-05
Aravind Battaje, Robotics and Biology Laboratory, Technical University of Berlin, Germany | Science of Intelligence, Research Cluster of Excellence, Berlin, Germany