Abstract
Vertical and horizontal are widely accepted as dominant directions or norms of visual orientation in the frontoparallel plane. They are supposed to cause a normalization effect consisting in the apparent rotation of a tilted straight line towards the nearest dominant direction. The evidence for tilt normalization towards the vertical or horizontal visual meridia is indirect. On the other hand, human observers are very sensitive to departures from the vertical and horizontal, which means that most orientations in the frontoparallel plane are termed tilted rather than vertical or horizontal. By measuring directly the orientation of dot patterns we found that estimated orientation was systematically biased towards the nearest 45 degrees-oblique visual meridian. This finding is interpreted as evidence for the existence of an oblique norm in visual tilt.References

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Copyright (c) 1989 Acta Neurobiologiae Experimentalis
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