Is the Vertical-Horizontal Illusion a Byproduct of the Environmental Vertical Illusion?

The vertical-horizontal illusion is the overestimation of a vertical line compared to a horizontal line of the same length. Jackson and Cormack (2007) proposed that the vertical-horizontal illusion might be a byproduct of the mechanisms that generate the environmental vertical illusion, which is the...

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Main Authors: Rebecka K. Hahnel-Peeters, Jessica L. Idoine, Russell E. Jackson, Aaron T. Goetz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-11-01
Series:Evolutionary Psychology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1474704920961953
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spelling doaj-8378deb074874ca58e609014a54441422020-11-25T04:01:36ZengSAGE PublishingEvolutionary Psychology1474-70492020-11-011810.1177/1474704920961953Is the Vertical-Horizontal Illusion a Byproduct of the Environmental Vertical Illusion?Rebecka K. Hahnel-Peeters0Jessica L. Idoine1Russell E. Jackson2Aaron T. Goetz3 These authors share first authorship. These authors share first authorship. University of Idaho, Moscow, ID, USA California State University, Fullerton, CA, USAThe vertical-horizontal illusion is the overestimation of a vertical line compared to a horizontal line of the same length. Jackson and Cormack (2007) proposed that the vertical-horizontal illusion might be a byproduct of the mechanisms that generate the environmental vertical illusion, which is the tendency to overestimate vertical distances (i.e., heights) relative to horizontal distances the same length. In our study, 326 undergraduate participants stood atop an 18.6-meter parking structure and estimated both the height of the structure and the horizontal distance of a target placed 18.6 meters away, using a moveable horizontal target across the length of the structure. Participants also completed a vertical-horizontal illusion task by drawing a horizontal line below a 9.1 cm vertical line. We correlated vertical distance estimates with vertical line estimates to test Jackson and Cormack’s byproduct hypothesis. This hypothesis was very weakly—if at all—supported by the data: Participants’ overestimations in the vertical-horizontal illusion task explained 1% of the variance associated with their overestimations in the environmental vertical illusion task. Additionally, to test whether the environmental vertical illusion is impervious to explicit awareness, a random half of our participants were advised to be mindful that people tend to overestimate heights. The results supported our second hypothesis: Even when participants were made aware of the environmental vertical illusion, they still reliably overestimated heights. Discussion addressed implications for the robustness of the environmental vertical illusion (e.g., treatment of those with acrophobia).https://doi.org/10.1177/1474704920961953
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rebecka K. Hahnel-Peeters
Jessica L. Idoine
Russell E. Jackson
Aaron T. Goetz
spellingShingle Rebecka K. Hahnel-Peeters
Jessica L. Idoine
Russell E. Jackson
Aaron T. Goetz
Is the Vertical-Horizontal Illusion a Byproduct of the Environmental Vertical Illusion?
Evolutionary Psychology
author_facet Rebecka K. Hahnel-Peeters
Jessica L. Idoine
Russell E. Jackson
Aaron T. Goetz
author_sort Rebecka K. Hahnel-Peeters
title Is the Vertical-Horizontal Illusion a Byproduct of the Environmental Vertical Illusion?
title_short Is the Vertical-Horizontal Illusion a Byproduct of the Environmental Vertical Illusion?
title_full Is the Vertical-Horizontal Illusion a Byproduct of the Environmental Vertical Illusion?
title_fullStr Is the Vertical-Horizontal Illusion a Byproduct of the Environmental Vertical Illusion?
title_full_unstemmed Is the Vertical-Horizontal Illusion a Byproduct of the Environmental Vertical Illusion?
title_sort is the vertical-horizontal illusion a byproduct of the environmental vertical illusion?
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Evolutionary Psychology
issn 1474-7049
publishDate 2020-11-01
description The vertical-horizontal illusion is the overestimation of a vertical line compared to a horizontal line of the same length. Jackson and Cormack (2007) proposed that the vertical-horizontal illusion might be a byproduct of the mechanisms that generate the environmental vertical illusion, which is the tendency to overestimate vertical distances (i.e., heights) relative to horizontal distances the same length. In our study, 326 undergraduate participants stood atop an 18.6-meter parking structure and estimated both the height of the structure and the horizontal distance of a target placed 18.6 meters away, using a moveable horizontal target across the length of the structure. Participants also completed a vertical-horizontal illusion task by drawing a horizontal line below a 9.1 cm vertical line. We correlated vertical distance estimates with vertical line estimates to test Jackson and Cormack’s byproduct hypothesis. This hypothesis was very weakly—if at all—supported by the data: Participants’ overestimations in the vertical-horizontal illusion task explained 1% of the variance associated with their overestimations in the environmental vertical illusion task. Additionally, to test whether the environmental vertical illusion is impervious to explicit awareness, a random half of our participants were advised to be mindful that people tend to overestimate heights. The results supported our second hypothesis: Even when participants were made aware of the environmental vertical illusion, they still reliably overestimated heights. Discussion addressed implications for the robustness of the environmental vertical illusion (e.g., treatment of those with acrophobia).
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1474704920961953
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