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      Beyond the Grand Illusion: What Change Blindness Really Teaches Us About Vision

      , ,
      Visual Cognition
      Informa UK Limited

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          Das Reafferenzprinzip: Wechselwirkungen zwischen Zentralnervensystem und Peripherie

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            Neural basis of the spontaneous optokinetic response produced by visual inversion.

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              Change blindness.

              Although at any instant we experience a rich, detailed visual world, we do not use such visual details to form a stable representation across views. Over the past five years, researchers have focused increasingly on 'change blindness' (the inability to detect changes to an object or scene) as a means to examine the nature of our representations. Experiments using a diverse range of methods and displays have produced strikingly similar results: unless a change to a visual scene produces a localizable change or transient at a specific position on the retina, generally, people will not detect it. We review theory and research motivating work on change blindness and discuss recent evidence that people are blind to changes occurring in photographs, in motion pictures and even in real-world interactions. These findings suggest that relatively little visual information is preserved from one view to the next, and question a fundamental assumption that has underlain perception research for centuries: namely, that we need to store a detailed visual representation in the mind/brain from one view to the next.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Visual Cognition
                Visual Cognition
                Informa UK Limited
                1350-6285
                1464-0716
                January 2000
                January 2000
                : 7
                : 1-3
                : 93-106
                Article
                10.1080/135062800394702
                5ec4c841-fe48-486b-89c5-18b7db4e0996
                © 2000
                History

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