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Group, assimilation, and increase in visibility association without a difference in features

Authors :
King, Donald L.
Source :
American Journal of Psychology. Summer, 1997, Vol. v110 Issue n2, p203, 21 p.
Publication Year :
1997

Abstract

There is evidence that one group is associated with assimilation among its parts and an increase in visibility (IV) of at least one of its parts: the 1group-assimilation-IV position. The present research supports this position using physically identical stimuli, hence eliminating differences in features. This was accomplished by comparing the effects of large and small backgrounds on responding to physically identical stimuli that appeared on these backgrounds. Compared to the small background, the large background produced a stronger two-line group according to a closure measure of grouping, more assimilation between two lines according to a same-different measure of perceived similarity, and a greater IV of one of two lines according to context+target versus context relative to target versus background discriminations. The large background was much larger than the two small lines, suggesting that it functioned as an anchor.<br />A group is at least frequently associated with assimilation among the parts that belong to it, including for both color and geometric parts, and for brief as well as prolonged [...]

Details

ISSN :
00029556
Volume :
v110
Issue :
n2
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
American Journal of Psychology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.20377199