Abstract
We assessed whether uniform connectedness (UC; Palmer & Rock, 1994) operates prior to effects reflecting classical principles of grouping: proximity and similarity. In Experiments 1 and 2, reaction times to discriminate global letters (H vs. E), made up of small circles, were recorded. The small circles were respectively grouped by proximity, similarity of shapes, and by UC. The discrimination of stimuli grouped by similarity was slower than those grouped by proximity, and it was speeded up by the addition of UC. However, the discrimination of stimuli grouped by proxhnity was unaffected by connecting the local elements. In Experiment 3, similar results occurred in a task requiring discrimination of the orientation of grouped elements, except that the discrimination of stimuli grouped by UC was faster than that of those grouped by weak proximity. Experiment 4 further showed that subjects could respond to letters composed of discriminably separate local elements as fast as to those without separated local elements. The results suggest that grouping by similarity of shapes is perceived slower than grouping by UC, but grouping by proximity can be as fast and efficient as that by UC.
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This study was supported by the State Commission of Science and Technology and the National Foundation of Sciences, People’s Republic of China, by the Human Frontier Science Program, and by the BBSRC (United Kingdom).
—Accepted by previous editor, Myron L. Braunstein
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Han, S., Humphreys, G.W. & Chen, L. Uniform connectedness and classical gestalt principles of perceptual grouping. Perception & Psychophysics 61, 661–674 (1999). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03205537
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03205537