Title of article
Mirrors, mirrors on the wall … the ubiquitous multiple reflection error
Author/Authors
Lawson، نويسنده , , Rebecca، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
11
From page
1
To page
11
Abstract
Participants decided when somebody, Janine, could see their face in a horizontal row of adjacent mirrors mounted flat on the same wall. They saw real mirrors and a shop-dummy representing Janine. Such coplanar mirrors reflect different, non-overlapping areas of a scene. However, almost everybody made an unexpected error: they claimed that Janine would see her face reflected in multiple mirrors simultaneously. They therefore responded as if each mirror showed similar information and thus grossly overestimated how much each mirror revealed. Further studies established that this multiple reflection error also occurred for vertical rows of mirrors and for different areas of a single, large mirror. The error was even common if the participant themselves sat in front of a set of covered-up mirrors and indicated where they would be able to see their own reflection. In the latter case, people often made multiple reflection errors despite having seen all the mirrors uncovered immediately before they responded. People’s gross overestimation of how much of a scene a mirror reflects and their inability to learn to correct this false belief explains why, despite a lifetime’s experience of mirrors, they incorrectly think they will see themselves in all nearby mirrors.
Keywords
Visual perspective-taking , Naive optics , Reflections , MIRROR
Journal title
Cognition
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Cognition
Record number
2077277
Link To Document