Lectures Perception
Lectures Perception
• The illusion stems from the fact that part of our visual
processing system is tells us that the lines must be
sloping while the cognitive part of our brains tells us
they are not.
– distortions of lengths
– distortions of angles
– distortions of areas
– distortions of shapes
Perspective Illusions
• A number illusions result from the visual system
interpreting visual elements as giving information about
depth.
23.7 24
31.3 Encode Decode 31
19.5 19
41.0 40
27.4 26
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Position on Identical but Unaligned Scales
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Encoding Using Slopes
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Encoding Using Luminance
Perception “Laws”
• Perceptual psychologists have established a number of
empirical laws for perception.
wp (x)
wp (x) = kp x
p(x) = Cxβ
p(2) 20.7
= 0.7 = 1.62
p(1) 1
p(1/2) 0.50.7
= 0.7 = 0.62
p(1) 1
for area.
We are more likely to detect small differences when a length
encoding is used than when area encoding is used.
Ranking Graphical Encodings
• Cleveland and McGill carried out an extensive study of
graphical encodings to obtain a best to worst ranking.
• Assessment criterion:
A B C D B
3 4
A A
B B
C C
D D
5 6
A A
B B
C C
D D
D
Results
Position (Common)
Position (Nonaligned)
Length
Angle
Slope
Circle Area
Blob Area
8 10 12 14
The Encoding Ranking
1. Position on a common scale
3. Length
4. Angle / Slope
5. Area
6. Volume
7. Colour properties
Recommendations
• Use the highest possible encoding on the
Cleveland-McGill scale.
GA
FL
Angular Encoding in a Pie Chart
Pie charts have a very weak perceptual basis.
D
Encoding Using Length
Encoding Using Identical Unaligned Scales