On 2016 Apr 05, Lydia Maniatis commented:
With respect to illusion and the theoretical explanation, Tyler addresses only one relevant factor, even though, as I explain in my article (and perhaps more clearly in a related chapter in the Oxford Compendium of Visual Illusions (in press for the past few years)), that factor is not enough to explain this new variant. He states that "Figure 3 also includes a verification that the primary illusion is not due to the orientation [of the] parallelogram of the top surfaces. The upper figure is a block-rotated version of the right- hand block with its surface parallelogram aligned with that of the left-hand block, showing that the illusion persists even in the aligned orientation. This result verifies that the illusion is due to the perspective context of the other two sides."
In fact, the illusion persists but also changes, a fact that as I have analyzed in detail implies that orientation as well as the 2D structure ("perspective context" is a meaningless term - try defining it) of the figure and its consequent 3D interpretation are implicated in the effect.
Another aspect of the original illusion that Tyler refers to as paradoxical are the apparent downward slopes of the tabletops, one left, one right. It isn't paradoxical. In the case, for example, in which the sideview of the structure is on the left, the horizontals must be receding from us to some degree. Receding lines rise in the visual field. In order to reconcile the fact that a line that is horizontal on the retinal is receding in space, we must also infer that it is downward sloping in space. When the left side is visible, the downward slope will be to the right, and vice versa.
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