Abstract

Abstract Twenty-one clothed boys, aged 8–14, viewed themselves in a full-length mirror while wearing lenses capable of inducing an apparent tilting backward of an object being viewed. A similarly aged group of 21 boys viewed their nude bodies while wearing the lenses. A psychophysical method of adjustment was used to measure the amount of apparent leaning induced by the lenses. The working hypothesis, that the nude boys would perceive less leaning of their mirror images than the clothed boys, was not supported.

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