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Design and Construction of an Urban Runoff Research Facility
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Urban experience alters lightness perception.

Karina J Linnell1, Andrew J Bremner1, Serge Caparos2

  • 1Department of Psychology, Goldsmiths, University of London.

Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human Perception and Performance
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Experience significantly changes how we perceive lightness. Cross-cultural studies show urban environments enhance local visual processing while reducing global effects, altering visual perception.

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Area of Science:

  • Visual Perception
  • Cross-Cultural Psychology
  • Cognitive Science

Background:

  • Lightness perception is crucial for object recognition.
  • Previous research suggests cultural and environmental factors influence visual processing.
  • The impact of specific environmental experiences on lightness perception remains underexplored.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To provide the first empirical evidence that experience alters lightness perception.
  • To investigate the role of experience in lightness perception through a cross-cultural comparison.
  • To examine how different perceptual biases (local vs. global) relate to environmental experience.

Main Methods:

  • Cross-cultural comparison of visual contrast phenomena.
  • Investigated simultaneous lightness contrast and White's illusion.
  • Compared traditional Himba, urban-dwelling Himba, and Western participants.

Main Results:

  • The Himba group, with a local perceptual bias, showed enhanced simultaneous lightness contrast.
  • The Himba group exhibited reduced White's illusion compared to urban groups.
  • Urban environments appear to foster a tendency for greater integration of visual information.

Conclusions:

  • Environmental experience, particularly urban living, demonstrably alters lightness perception.
  • Altered visual perception is linked to an increased tendency to integrate information across the visual scene.
  • Cross-cultural research provides valuable insights into the plasticity of visual processing.