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Regularity of symmetry verticality
guides perceptual judgments of objects
DIANE J. SCHIANO
Palo Alto Research Center
MICHAEL K. MCBEATH
Arizona State University
KENNETH W. CHAMBERS
Carleton, Inc.
Previous research indicated that most salient, real-world objects possess natural
regularities that observers commonly assume in perceptual judgments of figural
orientation and interpretation. Regularities include 3-dimensionality, bilateral symmetry,
and the tendency for object tops to possess more salient information than
bottoms. Thus, when observers interpret randomly shaped figures, they reliably
impose volume, bilateral symmetry, and top and front orientation directions, even
when figures are 2-dimensional and asymmetric. We confirmed generalizability for
observers to assume these regularities with stimuli that vary in complexity, and we
found evidence supporting another regularity, that of symmetry verticality (symmetry
about a vertical axis). Findings support use of a family of perceptual heuristics
corresponding to natural regularities that constrain stimulus indeterminacy and
help guide judgment of object orientation and interpretation.
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