The ball vanishes in the air: can we blame representational momentum?

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TitreThe ball vanishes in the air: can we blame representational momentum?
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuteursThomas C, Didierjean A
JournalPSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW
Volume23
Pagination1810-1817
Date PublishedDEC
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1069-9384
Mots-clésillusion, magic, Perception, Representational momentum
Résumé

In the vanishing ball illusion (VBI), the magician throws a ball up into the air twice and then pretends to do a third throw. On the third (fake) throw, the audience sees the ball go up and then disappear. In this article, we study the psychological mechanisms at play in this magic trick. We test the hypothesis that the illusion is based on representational momentum (RM), a psychological phenomenon in which the observer perceives the stopping point of a moving scene as being located farther ahead in the direction of motion than it really is. To determine whether the mechanisms involved in VBI are similar to those underlying RM, we compared the results of a standard VBI task to those obtained on an RM task designed to be very close to the VBI task. The results showed that VBI sensitivity was not associated with a higher anticipation score on the RM task. Unexpectedly, we found that participants who were sensitive to the illusion even obtained a weaker RM effect. We discuss several hypotheses that might account for these results.

DOI10.3758/s13423-016-1037-2