Abstract

In this work, we demonstrated unique and relevant visual properties imparted by contrast polarity in perceptual organization and in eliciting amodal completion, which is the vivid completion of a single continuous object of the visible parts of an occluded shape despite portions of its boundary contours not actually being seen. T-junction, good continuation, and closure are considered the main principles involved according to relevant explanations of amodal completion based on the simplicity–Prägnanz principle, Helmholtz’s likelihood, and Bayesian inference. The main interest of these approaches is to explain how the occluded object is completed, what is the amodal shape, and how contours of partially visible fragments are relatable behind an occluder. Different from these perspectives, amodal completion was considered here as a visual phenomenon and not as a process, i.e., the final outcome of perceptual processes and grouping principles. Therefore, the main question we addressed through our stimuli was “What is the role of shape formation and perceptual organization in inducing amodal completion?” To answer this question, novel stimuli, similar to limiting cases and instantiae crucis, were studied through Gestalt experimental phenomenology. The results demonstrated the domination of the contrast polarity against good continuation, T-junctions, and regularity. Moreover, the limiting conditions explored revealed a new kind of junction next to the T- and Y-junctions, respectively responsible for amodal completion and tessellation. We called them I-junctions. The results were theoretically discussed in relation to the previous approaches and in the light of the phenomenal salience imparted by contrast polarity.

Highlights

  • The presence of a multiplicity of objects within the natural environment, the loss of one spatial dimension during the projection of the image on the retina, and the inverse-optics problem reveal a true challenge that all visual systems must face and solve

  • The questions are, “What is the role of shape formation and perceptual organization in inducing amodal completion? Again, what are the perceptual conditions that elicit the segregation of occluded and occluding objects and, amodal completion? what is the role of the local contours, junctions, and termination attributes in eliciting the phenomenon of amodal completion?”

  • The starting question is “What is the role of shape formation and perceptual organization in inducing amodal completion?” To answer this question, the main purpose is studying the complexity of the perceptual organization through contrast polarity, which is useful to understand the complexity of amodal completion and to test the effectiveness of the theoretical approaches previously described

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Summary

Introduction

The presence of a multiplicity of objects within the natural environment, the loss of one spatial dimension during the projection of the image on the retina, and the inverse-optics problem reveal a true challenge that all visual systems must face and solve. This is the occlusion among objects within a three-dimensional space. The heptagon and the triangle are visible in their full shapes.

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