Abstract
It has been shown that reports of figural after-effects (FAEs) are very susceptible to the effects of an inducing set in otherwise experimentally naive Ss.SuchSsdo not generally report FAEs in the absence of an induced set. This may be so either because FAEs are artifacts of set and not real perceptual after-effects, or because naive Ss lack practice in making fine visual discriminations and hence do not observe the small after-effects present in a display. It is demonstrated that in at least one situation the latter alternative is the more probable.
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