Abstract

In the illusion of interrupted spatial extent (also known as the filled-space or Oppel-Kundt illusion), the stimulus spatial interval filled with some visual elements (distractors) appears larger than the unfilled interval of the same size. Despite a long history of research, there is still no consensus on the origin of this visual phenomenon. It was recently shown (Bulatov, Bulatova, Surkys, & Mickienė, Acta Neurobiologiae Experimentalis, 77, 157-167, 2017) that the illusion emergence can be associated mainly with the integration of distractor-evoked effects in regions surrounding the endpoints (terminators) of the stimulus intervals. In the present study, we investigated the two-dimensional weighting profiles of these regions of distractors' influence on the magnitude of length misjudgments. We performed psychophysical experiments with three-dot stimuli that contain distracting line segments, the position of which varied either along or perpendicular to the main stimulus axis, thus scanning the profile in two orthogonal directions. It was demonstrated that for distractors shifted along the stimulus axis, the magnitude of the illusion increases to a certain maximum value with the increase of distractors displacement and smoothly decreases to zero thereafter. For distractors shifted orthogonally to the stimulus axis, the illusion magnitude monotonically decreases with the increase of distractors displacement. In the case of the distractor rotation, the greatest illusion magnitude refers to orientations of the distracting line segment along the stimulus axis and decreases to the minimum value for the orthogonal orientation. Based on the analysis of established functional dependencies, we proposed a simple quantitative interpretation of the obtained experimental data.

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