Abstract

We examined potentially deceptive influences of the vertical-horizontal (V-H) illusion on manual length estimations. When viewing V-H illusory configurations, people perceive that the bisecting segment length exceeds the bisected segment length when segments are actually equal. Participants used downward or rightward pointing movements to manually estimate the length of a short bisecting segment of the V-H illusion in upright or rotated configurations. Participants directed their gaze freely, on the configuration, or on the movement space. Manual length estimations for upright and rotated configurations depended on gaze direction, revealing bisection influences only for restricted viewing. People produced illusory influences on perceptuomotor control only when gaze was directed toward V-H configurations or their movement. Exploitation of deceptive visual cues can direct upper limb control for sensorimotor coordination.

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