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1.
Hist Psychol ; 23(1): 26-39, 2020 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30973237

After Johannes Kepler's supposition of inverted and reversed retinal images and Christoph Scheiner's anatomical demonstration of such an inversion, the question arose whether this inversion is necessary and how it is possible to see an upright world based on an inverted image. The answer to this question is commonly attributed to the American psychologist George M. Stratton, who produced, in 1896, upright retinal images by means of lenses and showed that after a phase of inverted perception, upright vision is restored. However, prior to 1886, the Italian philosopher Roberto Ardigò had already performed optical experiments with a prism, obtaining a similar result. The intend of his optical investigation was essentially psychological, in opposition to contemporary physiological approaches. He accepted Hermann von Helmholtz's basic assumptions, but interpreted the results of his experiments in the framework of a more detailed theory of perception. The present article aims to analyze Ardigò's experiments and compare them with Stratton's in order to give them the place they deserve in the history of experimental psychology. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).


Psychology, Experimental/history , Retina/physiology , Vision, Ocular/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , History, 19th Century , Humans , Lenses , Optical Phenomena
2.
Sleep Med Rev ; 43: 37-46, 2019 02.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30503716

Several studies report an association between REM Sleep Behavior Disorder (RBD) and neurodegenerative diseases, in particular synucleinopathies. Interestingly, the onset of RBD precedes the development of neurodegeneration by several years. This review and meta-analysis aims to establish the rate of conversion of RBD into neurodegenerative diseases. Longitudinal studies were searched from the PubMed, Web of Science, and SCOPUS databases. Using random-effect modeling, we performed a meta-analysis on the rate of RBD conversions into neurodegeneration. Furthermore, we fitted a Kaplan-Meier analysis and compared the differences between survival curves of different diseases with log-rank tests. The risk for developing neurodegenerative diseases was 33.5% at five years follow-up, 82.4% at 10.5 years and 96.6% at 14 years. The average conversion rate was 31.95% after a mean duration of follow-up of 4.75 ± 2.43 years. The majority of RBD patients converted to Parkinson's Disease (43%), followed by Dementia with Lewy Bodies (25%). The estimated risk for RBD patients to develop a neurodegenerative disease over a long-term follow-up is more than 90%. Future studies should include control group for the evaluation of REM sleep without atonia as marker for neurodegeneration also in non-clinical population and target RBD as precursor of neurodegeneration to develop protective trials.


Biomarkers , Neurodegenerative Diseases/physiopathology , REM Sleep Behavior Disorder/physiopathology , Humans , Lewy Body Disease/diagnosis , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Parkinson Disease/diagnosis
3.
Sleep Med ; 45: 55-61, 2018 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29680429

BACKGROUND: Repetitive thought is a hallmark of several psychopathological conditions and in particular a perpetuating and maintaining factor in Insomnia Disorder. Accordingly, one of the primary complaints reported by Insomnia patients is the inability to shut-off or control thoughts. Worry and rumination are the two best-known styles of repetitive thought leading to sleep disturbances. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship of these two cognitive processes on nocturnal sleep indices objectively recorded by polysomnography. METHODS: 27 Insomnia patients and 20 healthy controls matched for sex and age were recruited and completed a comprehensive assessment aimed to evaluate sleep quality, excessive daytime sleepiness, insomnia severity, worry, rumination, depressive and anxious symptomatology, and the ability to produce reasonable cognitive estimates. Sleep diaries indices and polysomnographic recordings were evaluated. RESULTS: Insomnia patients showed increased levels of worry and rumination in comparison to controls. Our polysomnographic study revealed that these two different types of repetitive thoughts were significantly associated with objective sleep variables. In particular, heightened worry levels were related to an augmented wake after sleep onset and diminished total sleep time, sleep efficiency and percentage of REM sleep, whereas rumination was associated with an increase of sleep latency and a decrement of sleep efficiency. However, after controlling for anxiety and depressive symptoms only worry maintained a significant relationship with polysomnographic variables. Remarkably, repetitive thoughts did not correlate with microstructural REM sleep features and quantitative EEG analysis. CONCLUSION: Our study indicates the existence of a significant relationship between daytime levels of repetitive thought and sleep, thus corroborating the hypothesis of an interplay between cognitive and nocturnal electrophysiological activity in insomniacs.


Anxiety/psychology , Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders/psychology , Thinking/physiology , Depression/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Polysomnography , Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders/physiopathology
4.
Cortex ; 95: 136-142, 2017 10.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28869823

Obstructive Sleep Apnoea (OSA) is a common sleep disorder characterized by episodes of complete or partial obstruction of respiratory airways during sleep that leads to hypoxaemia and sleep fragmentation. One relevant daytime consequence of OSA is a negative impact on neurocognitive domain, ranging from psychomotor performance to executive function. In spite of a huge amount of evidence regarding cognitive impairment, little is known about perceptual processing in these patients. The aim of this research is to investigate the effects of OSA on visual mechanisms by employing a visual search paradigm. 19 OSA patients and 19 age-matched healthy controls (HC) participated in a case-control study. After a nocturnal cardiorespiratory monitoring, patients performed a visual search task in which they had to detect the presence/absence of a target (letter T) embedded in the 50% of trials into a set of distractors (letters Os, Xs, or Ls). Target's salience and distractors' numerosity were manipulated as independent variables, whereas accuracy and reaction times (RT) were recorded as dependent variables. HC, after the exclusion of any sleep disorder or sleepiness, performed the same experiments. Results generally confirmed the typical effects of visual search. OSA patients reported significantly slower RT in comparison with HC, indicating an overall perceptual deficit consisting in a harder extraction of relevant information from noise. Neither patients' age nor the objective clinical indices were associated with RT. This study indicates the presence of an impairment in OSA patients involving basic mechanisms of visual processing and likely ascribable to the disorder per se.


Reaction Time/physiology , Sleep Apnea, Obstructive/psychology , Visual Perception/physiology , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Monitoring, Physiologic , Photic Stimulation , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Sleep Apnea, Obstructive/physiopathology
5.
J Sleep Res ; 26(3): 338-344, 2017 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28032388

Insomnia disorder is associated with both subjective and objective daytime impairments. In particular, cognitive impairments are frequently reported. However, little is known about the effects of this pathology on perceptual processes. In this study we aim at evaluating the effect of insomnia disorder on visual processing by employing a visual search paradigm. Twenty-three patients with insomnia disorder and 20 healthy age- and sex-matched control subjects participated in the study. After a polysomnographic recording night patients performed a visual search task in which they had to respond to the presence/absence of a target (letter T) embedded into a set of distractors (letters Os, Xs or Ls). Target's salience and distractors' numerosity were manipulated, while accuracy and reaction times were recorded as dependent variables. The results mainly confirmed the typical effects of a visual search task. An overall delay in performing the task was observed for patients with insomnia disorder. However, distinguishing the reaction times to stimuli containing the target from reaction times to stimuli in which the target was absent, the clinical group differed from controls solely in the condition of target absent. The performance (reaction times) of the subjects correlated with the age in the control group, whereas no correlation between reaction times and age, disease duration and quality of sleep was found in patients with insomnia disorder. These results experimentally demonstrate the presence of a daytime impairment in patients with insomnia disorder revealed by a dissociation in visual search, and are discussed in the light of the hyperarousal concept of insomnia.


Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders/physiopathology , Vision, Ocular/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Adult , Aging/physiology , Aging/psychology , Case-Control Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Reaction Time/physiology , Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders/psychology
6.
Arch Ital Biol ; 154(1): 1-5, 2016 Apr 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27548094

Idiopathic Hypersomnia (IH) is a rare sleep disorder characterised by excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS) that leads to invalidating daytime consequences. Till now the treatment of IH has mirrored that of sleepiness in narcolepsy, and it is mainly focused on symptoms' management. We employed an anodal transcranic Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) treatment in order to induce a shift toward arousal in IH patients' cortex during the day. Every patients underwent a 4 weeks treatment (3 stimulations per week, for a total of 12 stimulations over a period of 28 days) with an assessment at the baseline and after treatment aimed to the evaluation of subjective daytime sleepiness, neurocognitive functions, and attentional domain tested by means of the Attentional Network Task (ANT). The dependent variables of the ANT are accuracy and reaction times, which represent the objective outcome of our study. A significant effect of tDCS' treatment in reducing EDS was found. Besides the amelioration in subjective EDS,  an objective improvement in RTs in all conditions of the ANT, in particular in the more difficult component, was observed. Our results indicate that tDCS may foster the management of EDS in IH, improving also the attentional domain.


Idiopathic Hypersomnia , Disorders of Excessive Somnolence , Humans , Narcolepsy , Pilot Projects , Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation
7.
Parkinsonism Relat Disord ; 22 Suppl 1: S69-72, 2016 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26427638

Rapid Eye Movement (REM) sleep Behaviour Disorder (RBD) is a REM sleep parasomnia characterized by loss of the muscle atonia that typically occurs during REM sleep, therefore allowing patients to act out their dreams. RBD manifests itself clinically as a violent behaviour occurring during the night, and is detected at the polysomnography by phasic and/or tonic muscle activity on the electromyography channel. In absence of neurological signs or central nervous system lesions, RBD is defined as idiopathic. Nevertheless, in a large number of cases the development of neurodegenerative diseases in RBD patients has been described, with the duration of the follow-up representing a fundamental aspect. A growing number of clinical, neurophysiologic and neuropsychological studies aimed to detect early markers of neurodegenerative dysfunction in RBD patients. Anyway, the evidence of impaired cortical activity, subtle neurocognitive dysfunction, olfactory and autonomic impairment and neuroimaging brain changes in RBD patients is challenging the concept of an idiopathic form of RBD, supporting the idea of RBD as an early manifestation of a more complex neurodegenerative process.


REM Sleep Behavior Disorder/diagnosis , REM Sleep Behavior Disorder/physiopathology , Sleep, REM/physiology , Animals , Cerebral Cortex/physiopathology , Electromyography/methods , Humans , Polysomnography/methods
8.
Behav Neurol ; 2015: 786928, 2015.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26101458

Parasomnias are unpleasant or undesirable behaviours or experiences that occur predominantly during or within close proximity to sleep. Pharmacological treatments of parasomnias are available, but their efficacy is established only for few disorders. Furthermore, most of these disorders tend spontaneously to remit with development. Nonpharmacological treatments therefore represent valid therapeutic choices. This paper reviews behavioural and cognitive-behavioural managements employed for parasomnias. Referring to the ICSD-3 nosology we consider, respectively, NREM parasomnias, REM parasomnias, and other parasomnias. Although the efficacy of some of these treatments is proved, in other cases their clinical evidence cannot be provided because of the small size of the samples. Due to the rarity of some parasomnias, further multicentric researches are needed in order to offer a more complete account of behavioural and cognitive-behavioural treatments efficacy.


Cognition/physiology , Parasomnias/psychology , Parasomnias/therapy , REM Sleep Behavior Disorder/psychology , Sleep/physiology , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods , Humans , Recurrence
9.
Cereb Cortex ; 25(6): 1685-95, 2015 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25270309

Developmental dyslexia (DD) is a heritable neurodevelopmental reading disorder that could arise from auditory, visual, and cross-modal integration deficits. A deletion in intron 2 of the DCDC2 gene (hereafter DCDC2d) increases the risk for DD and related phenotypes. In this study, first we report that illusory visual motion perception-specifically processed by the magnocellular-dorsal (M-D) stream-is impaired in children with DD compared with age-matched and reading-level controls. Second, we test for the specificity of the DCDC2d effects on the M-D stream. Children with DD and DCDC2d need significantly more contrast to process illusory motion relative to their counterpart without DCDC2d and to age-matched and reading-level controls. Irrespective of the genetic variant, children with DD perform normally in the parvocellular-ventral task. Finally, we find that DCDC2d is associated with the illusory motion perception also in adult normal readers, showing that the M-D deficit is a potential neurobiological risk factor of DD rather than a simple effect of reading disorder. Our findings demonstrate, for the first time, that a specific neurocognitive dysfunction tapping the M-D stream is linked with a well-defined genetic susceptibility.


Dyslexia , Gene Deletion , Illusions/genetics , Introns/genetics , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/deficiency , Motion Perception/physiology , Perceptual Disorders/etiology , Case-Control Studies , Child , Dyslexia/complications , Dyslexia/genetics , Dyslexia/pathology , Female , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/genetics , Humans , Male , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/genetics , Neuropsychological Tests , Perceptual Disorders/genetics , Photic Stimulation
10.
Arch Ital Biol ; 153(2-3): 184-93, 2015.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26742672

Restless Legs Syndrome/Willis Ekbom Disease (RLS/WED) is a common neurological disorder characterized by uncomfortable and unpleasant sensations in the legs, with an urge to move. The symptoms typically begin or worsen during periods of rest, in particular during the evening and at night, while the activity may typically relieve them. The majority of patients complains of poor sleep. Recent studies reported the prevalence is ranging from 5 to 10%. RLS/WED can be divided into primary (patients without associated conditions that may explain the symptoms) and secondary forms (mostly iron deficiency). RLS/WED is typically a chronic condition. The clinical course varies according to the age of onset. A great load of accumulating research and clinical data have led to an extended consensus for a need to enhance the diagnostic criteria. The aim of this paper is to provide a critical comparison among different diagnostic criteria, taking into account respectively the International Classification of Sleep Disorders (ICSD), the International RLS Study Group (IRLSSG) and the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). There are several remarkable distinctions between the IRLSSG revised criteria, ICSD-3 and DSM-V. Contrary to the DSM-V criteria, ICSD-3 diagnostic criteria are more aligned to the IRLSSG ones. In fact, the five essential criteria of the IRLSSG are also required for the diagnosis of RLS/WED according to ICSD-3. The new IRLSSG criteria provide a more rigorous approach to case ascertainment and a better characterization of patients by specifying clinical significance and course. Future ascertainment of correct diagnosis should include documentation that all five diagnostic criteria are considered.


Restless Legs Syndrome/diagnosis , Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , Humans , International Classification of Diseases , Restless Legs Syndrome/classification
11.
Int J Psychophysiol ; 95(3): 304-9, 2015 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25514234

Although a huge amount of clinical evidence for Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS) is present in literature, an exhaustive account of cognitive profile in RLS patients is still lacking. In this study we evaluated the neurocognitive function in RLS patients and the effects of a three-month treatment with a dopamine agonist (pramipexole) at low doses. Clinical and polysomnographic characteristics, cognitive abilities, quality of life and psychological clinical indices were assessed in 20 RLS patients and 15 age-matched controls. The neurocognitive results, obtained by untreated RLS patients (baseline), were firstly compared to those of controls and then to those of the same RLS group after treatment (follow-up). Increased Total Sleep Time, Slow Wave Sleep, Sleep Efficiency and decreased Sleep Latency, Wake After Sleep Onset and periodic leg movement index were found by polysomnographic recording after a three-month treatment. Results showed that cognitive functions, impaired at baseline when compared to control subjects, improved after the pharmacological treatment, reaching the scores of healthy subjects. Decision making, problem solving and categorizing abilities, investigated by the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT) and the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST), resulted lower in RLS patients at baseline than in controls. All these functions improved after pharmacological treatment, as well as quality of life, depressive and anxiety symptoms, and daytime sleepiness.


Benzothiazoles/therapeutic use , Cognition/drug effects , Dopamine Agonists/therapeutic use , Restless Legs Syndrome/drug therapy , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Case-Control Studies , Decision Making , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Games, Experimental , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests , Polysomnography , Pramipexole , Problem Solving , Quality of Life , Reaction Time/drug effects , Restless Legs Syndrome/psychology , Statistics, Nonparametric , Young Adult
12.
Brain Cogn ; 82(2): 213-8, 2013 Jul.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23685759

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is often associated with a detail-oriented perception and overselective attention in visual tasks, such as visual search and crowding. These results were obtained manipulating exclusively the spatial properties of the stimuli: few is known about the spatio-temporal dynamics of visual processing in ASD. In this study we employed an attentional masking (AM) paradigm comparing children with ASD and IQ-matched typically developing (TD) controls. The AM effect refers to an impaired identification of a target followed by a competitive masking object at different proximities in space and time. We found that ASD and TD groups did not differ in the AM effect provoked by the competitive object displayed in the same position of the target. In contrast, children with ASD showed a deeper and prolonged interference than the TD group when the masking object was displayed in the lateral position. These psychophysical results suggest that the inefficient attentional selection in ASD depends on the spatio-temporal interaction between competitive visual objects. These evidence are discussed in the light of the ASD altered neural connectivity hypothesis and the reentrant theory of perception.


Attention/physiology , Autistic Disorder/psychology , Visual Perception/physiology , Adolescent , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Neuropsychological Tests , Reaction Time/physiology , Visual Fields/physiology
14.
Perception ; 41(2): 148-67, 2012.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22670344

Wertheimer's (1923, Psychologische Forschung 4 301 - 350) idea that the perceptual world is articulated according to factors of organisation is widely acknowledged as one of the most original contributions of Gestalt psychology and stands as a milestone in the history of vision research. An inquiry focused on the forerunners of some of Wertheimer's factors of perceptual organisation is documented here. In fact, in 1900 Schumann described grouping by proximity and by vertical symmetry, and in 1903 G E Müller identified the factors of sameness/similarity and contour. Other authors contributed to the early description of these factors, such as Rubin, who in 1922 originally illustrated grouping by similarity. Even though Wertheimer himself granted these authors due recognition, later psychologists have paid little attention to their contributions. Some possible reasons for this negligence are briefly discussed.


Perceptual Closure , Psychology, Experimental/history , Visual Perception , Germany , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans
15.
Neural Netw ; 24(10): 1082-92, 2011 Dec.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21784613

Parametric psychophysical investigations are reported for two related illusory effects that occur when viewing an elementary square-wave grating while making "back and forth" head movements along the projection line. Observers report a non-rigid distortion of the pattern, including: (i) an expansion in a direction perpendicular to the stripes, and (ii) a perceived curvature of the stripes. We investigated these two phenomena independently. The first depends on the classical physiological aperture problem that confronts early cells in the vision system. Interactions between ambiguous and unambiguous motion signals, generated at line interiors and line ends, respectively, can explain why the perceived expansion occurs only in directions perpendicular to the stripes. A simple model is presented and successfully tested by a nulling psychophysical experiment with four subjects. The experiment varies key stimulus attributes that generate ambiguous and unambiguous motion signals. Regarding the illusory curvature, a differential geometry model of the optics of our display, which identifies a non-classical three-dimensional (3D) aperture problem, is proposed (Yazdanbakhsh & Gori, 2011). We tested that model by implementing its closed form prediction of distortion to design displays for a second psychophysical experiment that also uses a nulling technique. Results from four subjects allow the quantification of the degree of perceived curvature as a function of speed, distance and stimulus type (blurred vs. unblurred grating) and are compatible with the predictions of the model.


Illusions/physiology , Models, Neurological , Motion Perception/physiology , Psychophysics/methods , Visual Pathways/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult
16.
Vision Res ; 50(23): 2466-75, 2010 Nov 23.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20801140

According to the Oppel-Kundt illusion, a filled space appears larger than an empty one. In the present research we studied how textural characteristics affect the perceived size of two-dimensional patterns. We investigated the perceived extension of square textures by manipulating spatial frequency and filling microelements' numerosity. Subjects compared the test stimuli with a uniform gray square varied in size and performed the task both with the adjustment and the constant stimuli methods. An illusory increment of area extension was generally found with textured stimuli. The illusory effect increased with spatial frequency and decreased with the microelements' number, indicating an independent processing of these two basic properties. Moreover, the smaller effect found when spatial frequency extraction became harder, confirmed that the illusion involves spatial frequency processing. Finally, the reduced overestimation of areas observed with a weaker subparts' articulation confirmed the relevance of clear distinguishable micropatterns at the basis of the phenomenon. Those results demonstrate the influence of textural statistical properties on perceiving the size of a visual object.


Optical Illusions , Size Perception/physiology , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Psychophysics , Space Perception , Young Adult
17.
Perception ; 39(6): 863-6, 2010.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20698480

A new motion illusion based on dot-trajectory misperception is presented. The illusory effect can not be explained by the aperture problem unlike some previous illusions characterised by misperception of motion direction. We propose an explanation in terms of 'perceptual compromise' between an original type of apparent motion and the veridical motion. Several demonstrations are presented in support of that hypothesis.


Motion Perception/physiology , Optical Illusions/physiology , Humans , Photic Stimulation/methods
18.
Perception ; 39(1): 5-12, 2010.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20301842

By blurring the margins of a surface, both its brightness and the perceived contrast against a superimposed figure with sharp boundaries increase. Also, if one approaches a blurred white spot on a grey background, this spot will appear wider and brighter: this phenomenon is known as the Breathing Light Illusion (BLI) (Gori and Stubbs, 2006 Perception 35 1573-1577). We studied the increment of the achromatic contrast of a grey sharp-boundary disk when it was superimposed on the BLI. This augmentation of the perceived contrast in the dynamic presentation of the BLI was significantly stronger than the effect that Agostini and Galmonte (2002a Psychonomic Bulletin and Review 9 264-269) obtained in static presentation. Our study leads to an indirect quantification of the BLI. Two control experiments showed that the increment of the achromatic contrast depends on the blurred spot and is independent of the dynamic increment in angular size. These results argue for a causal relationship between the increase in brightness due to the BLI and the darkening of the superimposed disk.


Motion , Optical Illusions/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Humans
19.
Acta Psychol (Amst) ; 129(3): 399-409, 2008 Nov.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18929348

In a series of experiments using ambiguous stimuli, we investigate the effects of displaying ordered, discrete series of images on the dynamics of figure-ground segregation. For low frame presentation speeds, the series were perceived as a sequence of discontinuous, static images, while for high speeds they were perceived as continuous. We conclude that using stimuli varying continuously along one parameter results in stronger hysteresis and reduces spontaneous switching compared to matched static stimuli with discontinuous parameter changes. The additional evidence that the size of the hysteresis effects depended on trial duration is consistent with the stochastic nature of the dynamics governing figure-ground segregation. The results showed that for continuously changing stimuli, alternative figure-ground organizations are resolved via low-level, dynamical competition. A second series of experiments confirmed these results with an ambiguous stimulus based on Petter's effect.


Attention , Field Dependence-Independence , Motion Perception , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Reaction Time , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Nonlinear Dynamics , Psychophysics , Size Perception , Young Adult
20.
Spat Vis ; 21(3-5): 201-27, 2008.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18534100

Western visual art has radically changed throughout the centuries: different techniques, interest in the representation of reality, and use of graphic signs. Indeed, only a few pictorial cues have retained the same meaning and use. These kinds of graphic invariants may play a key role not only in a comparative study of art history, but also for discovering underlying common perceptual mechanisms. Here the aim is to show that western painters use the same graphic solutions to represent motion in garments, across countries and centuries. A pilot experiment, using 160 paintings representative of all main western European art movements from the thirteenth to the twentieth century, shows that different artists represented the motion of garments with the same orientation, curvature and convergence of lines. Experiment 1 demonstrates, with a smaller sample of paintings (16, i.e. two per century) that the relationship between orientation, curvature and convergence of lines is a good predictor of perceived motion. Experiment 2 shows how the same garments, isolated from the context of the paintings, still give different dynamic impressions according to the same rules. Finally, Experiment 3 confirmed the same results, whilst patterns previously used are simplified to their geometrical structure. These results call for an underlying perceptual mechanism that specifically recognizes orientation, curvature and parallelism levels as cues of motion in a static pattern.


Depth Perception/physiology , Motion , Paintings , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Adult , Humans
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