Abstract

Abstract symmetric patterns are generally preferred to less regular patterns. Here, we studied 2D patterns presented as 2D images in the plane, and therefore producing a symmetric pattern on the retina, and the same patterns seen in perspective. This perspective transformation eliminates the presence of perfect symmetry in terms of retinotopic coordinates. Stimuli were abstract patterns of local coplanar elements, or irregular polygons. In both cases they can be understood as 2D patterns on a transparent glass pane. In the first study we found that perspective increased reaction time and errors in a classification task, even when the viewing angle was kept constant over many images. In a second study we tested a large sample (148 participants) and asked for a rating of beauty for the same images. In addition, we used the Cognitive Reflection Test (CRT) to test the hypothesis that people who tend to give the more immediate and intuitive answer would also show a stronger preference for the symmetry presented in the frontoparallel plane (in the image and on the retina). Preference for symmetry was confirmed, and there was a cost for perspective viewing. CRT scores were not related to preference, thus not supporting the hypothesis of a stronger preference for symmetry in the image when people follow a more immediate and intuitive gut response.

Highlights

  • Symmetry is often cited as a fundamental principle of aesthetics

  • The perceived beauty of symmetry may be related to the fact that human visual system is very sensitive to the presence of symmetry in an image [24]

  • The perspective transformation meant that perfect symmetry was absent in terms of image or retinal coordinates

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Summary

Introduction

We asked to what extent perspective distortions affect perception of symmetry, and in turn preference for symmetry. Often constancy processes are less than perfect, and the difficulty in extracting information from an image may affect the perception of symmetry and preference for symmetry. This is our second research question: the relationship, for a specific set of stimuli, between perception and beauty judgments. We expect that when symmetry is more salient it would be judged as more beautiful. To answer this question we employed the same stimuli in the two tasks. We were interested in individual differences because people may vary in how they are affected by task difficulty

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