Search results for "Horizontal orientation"

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The Oppel-Kundt Illusion and Its Relation to Horizontal-Vertical and Oblique Effects.

2021

The Oppel–Kundt illusion consists in the overestimation of the length of filled versus empty extents. Two experiments explored its relation to the horizontal-vertical illusion, which consists in the overestimation of the length of vertical versus horizontal extents, and to the oblique effect, which consists in poorer discriminative sensitivity for obliquely as opposed to horizontally or vertically oriented stimuli. For Experiment 1, Kundt’s (1863) original stimulus was rotated in steps of 45° full circle around 360°. For Experiment 2, one part of the stimulus remained at a horizontal or vertical orientation, whereas the other part was tilted 45° or 90°. The Oppel–Kundt illusion was at its …

Horizontal and verticalOptical illusionOptical Illusionsmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesIllusionOblique caseExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyHorizontal orientationGeometry050105 experimental psychologySensory Systems03 medical and health sciencesOphthalmology0302 clinical medicineArtificial IntelligenceOrientation (geometry)Humans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesOblique effect030217 neurology & neurosurgeryGeologymedia_commonPerception
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Consequences of food-attraction conditioning in Helix: a behavioral and electrophysiological study

1996

Food-attraction conditioning is a learning phenomenon by which adult Helix pomatia acquire the ability to locate food through exposure to that particular food. Food-conditioned snails can be distinguished from ‘naive’ snails during their approach to food. ‘Naive’ snails keep their tentacles upright — whereas ‘food-conditioned’ animals bend the tentacles down-ward, in a horizontal orientation, pointed in the direction of the food.

CommunicationbiologyPhysiologybusiness.industryHelix (gastropod)fungidigestive oral and skin physiologyHorizontal orientationSnailHelix pomatiabiology.organism_classificationAttractionBehavioral NeuroscienceElectrophysiologybiology.animalparasitic diseasesConditioningAnimal Science and ZoologyPsychologybusinessNeuroscienceEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Comparative Physiology A
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