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Iperception. 2015 Apr;6(2):108-110. doi: 10.1068/i0723sas. Epub 2015 Apr 01.

Zen Mountains: An Illusion of Perceptual Transparency.

i-Perception

Susan G Wardle, Thomas A Carlson

Affiliations

  1. Department of Cognitive Science and ARC Centre for Cognition and its Disorders, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

PMID: 28299170 PMCID: PMC4950024 DOI: 10.1068/i0723sas

Abstract

The human visual system is usually very successful in segmenting complex natural scenes. During a trip to the Nepalese Himalayas, we observed an impossible example of Nature's beauty: "transparent" mountains. The scene is captured in a photograph in which a pair of mountain peaks viewed in the far distance appear to be transparent. This illusion results from a fortuitous combination of lighting and scene conditions, which induce an erroneous integration of multiple segmentation cues. The illusion unites three classic principles of visual perception: Metelli's constraints for perceptual transparency, the Gestalt principle of good continuation, and depth from contrast and atmospheric scattering. This real-world "failure" of scene segmentation reinforces how ingeniously the human visual system typically integrates complex sources of perceptual information using heuristics based on likelihood as shortcuts to veridical perception.

Keywords: Gestalt principle of good continuation; depth perception; image segmentation; nonreversing X-junction; perceptual grouping; transparency; visual illusion

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