As 2007 comes to an end, we hope that you have a relaxing holiday season and send you our best wishes for a rewarding New Year.
The office will be closed from the 21st December and will re-open on the 2nd January. Please contact us via sales@crsltd.com during this time, and we will get back to you as soon as possible in the New Year.
CRS Customer's walk away with 2007 Best Visual Illusion Prize - But who will win the 2008 prize?
December 2007
2007 Kingdom, Yoonessi & Gheorghiu
CRS will be sponsoring 2008's Best Visual Illusion Contest and providing the prize for the winner!
We are thrilled to see how many CRS customers were competing in the contest over the past few years.
" Here is a novel illusion that is as striking as it is simple. The two images of the Leaning Tower of Pisa are
identical, yet one has the impression that the tower on the right leans more, as if photographed from a
different angle. The reason for this is because the visual system treats the two images as if part of a single
scene. Normally, if two adjacent towers rise at the same angle, their image outlines converge as they recede
from view due to perspective, and this is taken into account by the visual system. So when confronted with
two towers whose corresponding outlines are parallel, the visual system assumes they must be diverging as
they rise from view, and this is what we see. The illusion is not restricted to towers photographed from
below, but works well with other scenes, such as railway tracks receding into the distance. What this illusion
reveals is less to do with perspective, but how the visual system tends to treat two side-by-side images as if
part of the same scene. However hard we try to think of the two photographs of the Leaning Tower as
separate, albeit identical images of the same object, our visual system regards them as the ‘Twin Towers of
Pisa’, whose perspective can only be interpreted in terms of one tower leaning more than the other."
Find out more about Frederick Kingdom and his work by clicking here.
Arthur Shapiro and Emily Knight of Bucknell University, USA came in the top three last year and are also valued CRS customers.
Last year, Arthur Shapiro and Emily Knight of Bucknell University, USA came in third place with an illusion called "Where did all the motion go?" in which the removal of low spatial frequency information creates the perception of motion. You can see that illusion and read more about it at the illusion contest web page by clicking here.
Here is a new illusion from Shapiro's laboratory, called "field of squares". The pacmen are stationary, but they appear to move because of the contrast with the background. The motion makes the Kanizsa squares appear to contort. Press the "click for steady background button" to stop the motion; or move the slider to change the angle of the pacmen. (See also "Swimmers, eels, and other gradient-gradient illusions" at the illusion contest web page by clicking here)
"Visual Illusions" Exhibition comes to Reno!
December 2007
Visual Illusions exhibition opening at the Fleischmann Planetarium and Science Museum at the University of Nevada, Reno.
An opening reception Dec. 7, at the will kick off with a presentation by world-renowned scholar, Stuart Anstis, Ph.D., from the University of California, San Diego. The lecture, reception and exhibition are free and open to the public. Perceptual Relativity, an interactive exhibition developed by the University of Nevada, Reno Department of Psychology and on display at the University’s Fleischmann Planetarium and Science Center, explores individual perception through visual illusions — images that distort our perceptions in remarkable ways. It opened on December 7th at the Fleischmann Planetarium, kicking off with a presentation by Stuart Anstis, expert on human perception, from the University of California, San Diego.
The multimedia exhibit is a free, permanent installation, with several changing displays and new content in the new year. The exhibition will allow visitors to explore dozens of illusions that provide a powerful window into the workings of the human mind.
The Perceptual Relativity exhibit was created by faculty and students in the graduate program in cognitive and brain sciences in the University of Nevada, Reno Department of Psychology, and is supported by grants from the Optical Society of America and the University of Nevada, Reno College of Liberal Arts.
In anticipation of the Society for Neuroscience Conference starting this weekend (3rd - 7th Nov) in San Diego CA, CRS have released a special edition Neuroscience themed e-newsletter.
It's full to the brim of exciting and inspiring news, research topics and special features on how CRS tools can be utilised in all sorts of Neuroscience research areas.
If you don't subscribe already - revealed here are some of the research topics from the edition:
CRS sponsor Professor Michael F Land FRS - 'Eye Movements and actions: knowing where to look'
UCL, London - Monday 29th October at 5.30pm
CRS to sponsor Prof. Michael F Land in this years W.S. Stiles Memorial Lecture
Professor Michael F Land FRS of the
Sussex Vision Laboratory, University of Sussex will be giving his lecture ‘Eye movements and actions: knowing where to look’ on the 29th October at the UCL Institute of Ophthalmology, London.
It will be this year's W.S. Stiles Memorial Lecture and the second time that we have sponsored a lecture by Prof. Land. Make sure you stay for the wine reception afterwards - wine provided by CRS!
The 15th Annual Object Perception, Attention and Memory Meeting is taking place on the 15th November 2007 in Long Beach, USA. This year's Keynote Speak will be Professor Vincent DiLollo with a lecture entitled 'Memory and prediction: that's what the brain is in business for'.
Click here to visit the OPAM 2007 website to see the schedule and register for the event.