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A narrow ellipse oscillating rigidly about its center appears
rigid
(quicktime 191k).
However, a fat ellipse undergoing the same
motion appears nonrigid
(quicktime 197k).
The apparent nonrigidity of a fat ellipse is not really a
"visual illusion". A rotating ellipse or a nonrigid pulsating
ellipse can cause the exact same stimulation on our retinas. In
this sequence
(quicktime 370k)
the ellipse contour is always doing the same thing, only the markers'
motion changes.
The ellipse's motion can be influenced by features not
physically connected to the ellipse. In this sequence (quicktime 420k)
the ellipse is always doing the same thing, only the dots'
motion changes.
The ellipse's motion is not influenced by spurious
features. In this sequence (quicktime 407k)
our visual system parses the scene into two rigidly moving
objects, rather than one nonrigdly deforming one.