Effects of Stimulus Asymmetry on Line Bisection
Authors
Affiliations
There is an upward bias in bisecting radial and vertical lines under visual guidance. We investigated whether illusory visual factors might contribute to a previously reported representational upward bias in this task. In two experiments, subjects performed a line-bisection task along the three orthogonal axes (horizontal, radial, vertical). In Experiment 1, the stimuli consisted of a line terminated at each end by two equal- or different-sized bars. In Experiment 2, the stimuli were formed by a line terminated by two equal- or different-sized directional labels: SOPRA ("top") and SOTTO ("bottom"). The results showed a bisection bias towards the smaller bar (Experiment 1) and the smaller directional label (Experiment 2) on all three spatial axes, supporting the existence of an illusory visual effect. Contrary to a previous report, the data failed to show any representational (semantic) bias related to directional label meaning. These findings suggest that perceptual/attentional factors play a significant role in normal subjects' upward bias.
Hemispheric Asymmetries in Radial Line Bisection: Role of Retinotopic and Spatiotopic Factors.
Chieffi S, Messina G, Villano I, Messina A, Ilardi C, Monda M Front Psychol. 2018; 9:2200.
PMID: 30483201 PMC: 6240617. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02200.
Visual illusion and line bisection: a bias hypothesis revisited.
Chieffi S Exp Brain Res. 2016; 234(6):1451-8.
PMID: 26781491 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-015-4550-z.
Age-related differences in distractor interference on line bisection.
Chieffi S, Iavarone A, Iaccarino L, La Marra M, Messina G, De Luca V Exp Brain Res. 2014; 232(11):3659-64.
PMID: 25092273 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-014-4056-0.
Flanker interference effects in a line bisection task.
Chieffi S, Iachini T, Iavarone A, Messina G, Viggiano A, Monda M Exp Brain Res. 2014; 232(4):1327-34.
PMID: 24496492 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-014-3851-y.
Effect of a visual distractor on line bisection.
Chieffi S, Iavarone A, Viggiano A, Monda M, Carlomagno S Exp Brain Res. 2012; 219(4):489-98.
PMID: 22576681 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-012-3106-8.