Abstract

This study tested preference for abstract patterns, comparing random patterns to a two-fold bilateral symmetry. Stimuli were presented at random locations in the periphery. Preference for bilateral symmetry has been extensively studied in central vision, but evaluation at different locations had not been systematically investigated. Patterns were presented for 200 ms within a large circular region. On each trial participant changed fixation and were instructed to select any location. Eccentricity values were calculated a posteriori as the distance between ocular coordinates at pattern onset and coordinates for the centre of the pattern. Experiment 1 consisted of two Tasks. In Task 1, participants detected pattern regularity as fast as possible. In Task 2 they evaluated their liking for the pattern on a Likert-scale. Results from Task 1 revealed that with our parameters eccentricity did not affect symmetry detection. However, in Task 2, eccentricity predicted more negative evaluation of symmetry, but not random patterns. In Experiment 2 participants were either presented with symmetry or random patterns. Regularity was task-irrelevant in this task. Participants discriminated the proportion of black/white dots within the pattern and then evaluated their liking for the pattern. Even when only one type of regularity was presented and regularity was task-irrelevant, preference evaluation for symmetry decreased with increasing eccentricity, whereas eccentricity did not affect the evaluation of random patterns. We conclude that symmetry appreciation is higher for foveal presentation in a way not fully accounted for by sensitivity.

Highlights

  • Bilateral symmetry is a ubiquitous structural property of objects, which is salient both for humans and for other animal species [1,2,3,4,5]

  • We did not observe any effect of visual eccentricity on detection speed and accuracy for symmetry against random patterns

  • Bilateral symmetry is a powerful predictor of aesthetic judgments

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Summary

Introduction

Bilateral symmetry is a ubiquitous structural property of objects, which is salient both for humans and for other animal species [1,2,3,4,5]. It has been suggested that the visual system is tuned to bilateral symmetry and uses this property as a perceptual cue in figureground discrimination Bilateral symmetry in clouds of dots is accurately distinguished from random dot patterns of similar size and density at brief exposure times [9,10,11], even when embedded in noise [11,12,13]. As bilateral symmetry is effortlessly extracted [14], it has been suggested that it acts as a visual primitive and it has been incorporated as a Gestalt property [15,16].

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