Blodgett's (1919) "Ship camouflage" 105 years on: A misperception of dazzle perception revealed and redressed.

IF 2.4 4区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL
I-Perception Pub Date : 2025-03-14 eCollection Date: 2025-03-01 DOI:10.1177/20416695241312316
Timothy Simon Meese, Samantha Louise Strong
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

During WWI, dazzle camouflage involved painting allied shipping with bold geometric patterns to disrupt the perceptions of enemy submariners. The first experiment to provide quantitative results on this (Blodgett, 1919; MIT Libraries, MA) used scale models and mechanical simulation, and reported enormous perceptual errors for their perceived direction of travel (up to ∼60°), possibly due to a "twist" effect from forced perspective. However, Blodgett's work did not meet modern standards and the organisation of his report complicates evaluation. Here, we produce (i) reformatted and (ii) heavily edited versions of the original report to improve readability, and (iii) provide a critical reappraisal of the work including (iv) a detailed reanalysis of Blodgett's data and (v) a new control experiment on edited images of the original stimuli. After addressing problems with Blodgett's analysis and control experiment, we found results indicating a twist of only about 7°, but a much larger "hysteresis" effect (∼19-23°) where perceived direction was drawn to the horizon regardless of dazzle. This effect combined both constructively and destructively with "twist", depending on the direction of the target ship. These reappraised findings resolve an apparent conflict with the second quantitative experiment on dazzle ships conducted over a century later using computer displays online (Lovell et al., 2024; Royal Society Open Science). We conclude that Blodgett's approach and data remain of interest today, but his conclusions substantially overestimated the effectiveness of dazzle camouflage in biasing the perceived directions of ships. However, other potential benefits of dazzle, including perceptual variance, await systematic investigation.

Blodgett的(1919)“舰船迷彩”105年:对眩光感知的误解揭示与纠正。
在第一次世界大战期间,炫目迷彩包括给盟军船只涂上大胆的几何图案,以扰乱敌方潜艇的感知。第一个提供定量结果的实验(Blodgett, 1919;麻省理工学院图书馆(MIT Libraries, MA)使用比例模型和机械模拟,并报告了他们感知的行进方向(高达~ 60°)的巨大感知误差,可能是由于强迫视角的“扭曲”效应。然而,布洛杰特的工作不符合现代标准,他的报告的组织使评估复杂化。在这里,我们制作(i)重新格式化和(ii)大量编辑的原始报告版本,以提高可读性,以及(iii)提供对工作的批判性重新评估,包括(iv)对Blodgett数据的详细重新分析和(v)对原始刺激的编辑图像进行新的控制实验。在解决了Blodgett的分析和控制实验的问题后,我们发现结果表明扭曲只有大约7°,但更大的“滞后”效应(~ 19-23°),在这种情况下,无论眩光如何,感知方向都被吸引到地平线上。这种效果结合了建设性和破坏性的“扭曲”,取决于目标船的方向。这些重新评估的发现解决了与一个多世纪后使用计算机在线显示进行的第二次眩光船定量实验的明显冲突(Lovell等人,2024;皇家学会开放科学)。我们得出的结论是,布洛杰特的方法和数据在今天仍然令人感兴趣,但他的结论在很大程度上高估了眩光伪装在使船只感知方向产生偏差方面的有效性。然而,眼花缭乱的其他潜在好处,包括感知变异,还有待系统的研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
I-Perception
I-Perception PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL-
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
5.30%
发文量
39
审稿时长
12 weeks
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