Abstract

Simple SummaryResearch in neurobiology and ethology has given us a glimpse into the different perceptual worlds of animals. More recently, visual illusions have been used in behavioural research to compare the perception between different animal species. The studies conducted so far have provided contradictory results, raising the possibility that different methodological approaches might influence illusory perception. Here, we review the literature on this topic, considering both field and laboratory studies. In addition, we compare the two approaches used in laboratories, namely spontaneous choice tests and training procedures, highlighting both their relevance and their potential weaknesses. Adopting both procedures has the potential to combine their advantages. Although this twofold approach has seldomly been adopted, we expect it will become more widely used in the near future in order to shed light on the heterogeneous pattern observed in the literature of visual illusions.Although we live on the same planet, there are countless different ways of seeing the surroundings that reflect the different individual experiences and selective pressures. In recent decades, visual illusions have been used in behavioural research to compare the perception between different vertebrate species. The studies conducted so far have provided contradictory results, suggesting that the underlying perceptual mechanisms may differ across species. Besides the differentiation of the perceptual mechanisms, another explanation could be taken into account. Indeed, the different studies often used different methodologies that could have potentially introduced confounding factors. In fact, the possibility exists that the illusory perception is influenced by the different methodologies and the test design. Almost every study of this research field has been conducted in laboratories adopting two different methodological approaches: a spontaneous choice test or a training procedure. In the spontaneous choice test, a subject is presented with biologically relevant stimuli in an illusory context, whereas, in the training procedure, a subject has to undergo an extensive training during which neutral stimuli are associated with a biologically relevant reward. Here, we review the literature on this topic, highlighting both the relevance and the potential weaknesses of the different methodological approaches.

Highlights

  • Understanding how the different animal species see the world around them has long interested researchers from ancient times to today

  • The findings obtained until now prompted a debate as to whether animal species share similar perceptual mechanisms underlying visual perception and if these are homologous to our perceptual mechanisms

  • This issue becomes even more relevant regarding the possibility of developing animal models to investigate visual perception disorders, to find out general principles necessary to build successful artificial visual systems and, more generally, to study critical research topics in perception that, for practical and ethical reasons, cannot be deepened in our species, such as the ontogeny of perceptual mechanisms and the exact neural circuits underlying visual perception

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding how the different animal species see the world around them has long interested researchers from ancient times to today. Papio anubis in the case of the Zöllner illusion [40]), the methodology adopted provides a yes/no response termsillusion of susceptiIn summary, some studies found a similar perception of the same in visual bility to an illusory phenomenon, but the information about the direction of the illusion among vertebrates, suggesting similar perceptual mechanisms, whereas others high(human-like or reverse) is not available. There is of the abovementioned methodological questions, here, we critically examine and compare evidence that different methods of investigating the Ebbinghaus illusion can lead to difbehavioural studies that investigated the perception of visual illusions in non-human ferent results in the same species, as in bantam chickens. Males vary consistently in the quality of the perspective illusion and that the latter is positively correlated with mating success [46,47]

Laboratory Studies
Spontaneous Choice Tests
Training Procedures
A Comparison of the Different Methodological Approaches
Findings
Conclusions
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