English

Modeling geometric-optical illusions: A variational approach

Neurons and Cognition 2013-04-24 v2 Classical Analysis and ODEs

Abstract

Visual distortions of perceived lengths, angles, or forms, are generally known as "geometric-optical illusions" (GOI). In the present paper we focus on a class of GOIs where the distortion of a straight line segment (the "target" stimulus) is induced by an array of non-intersecting curvilinear elements ("context" stimulus). Assuming local target-context interactions in a vector field representation of the context, we propose to model the perceptual distortion of the target as the solution to a minimization problem in the calculus of variations. We discuss properties of the solutions and reproduction of the respective form of the perceptual distortion for several types of contexts. Moreover, we draw a connection between the interactionist model of GOIs and Riemannian geometry: the context stimulus is understood as perturbing the geometry of the visual field from which the illusory distortion naturally arises. The approach is illustrated by data from a psychophysical experiment with nine subjects and six different contexts.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1211.6615,
  title  = {Modeling geometric-optical illusions: A variational approach},
  author = {Werner Ehm and Jiri Wackermann},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1211.6615},
  year   = {2013}
}

Comments

Minor corrections, final version

R2 v1 2026-06-21T22:45:29.798Z