Gestaltzerfall

Gestaltzerfall (German for "shape decomposition" or Gestalt decomposition[1]) is a type of visual agnosia and is a psychological phenomenon where delays in recognition are observed when a complex shape is stared at for a while as the shape seems to decompose into its constituting parts. In plain terms, if a subject reads or hears the same term over and over, that term ceases to have any meaning. With regards to kanji, a study has shown that delays are most significant when the characters are of the same size. When characters to recognize are of different sizes, delays are observed only when they are of different patterns.[2]

Gestaltzerfall has also been described as a phenomenon where the output signals from the brain go beyond their expected range.[3]

Origin

The phenomenon was first described and named by C. Faust in 1947 as a symptom of the bilateral region of the parieto-occipital sulcus after a through and through bullet wound of this region. Afterwards, when the subject stared at a truck for a while the truck seemed to decompose into its motor, chassis, driver cab and the person could only focus on one of these parts until he briefly closed his eyes or looked away which reset the shape to the complete truck again.[4]

Gestaltzerfall has also been applied in the case of spoken text where the speaker experiences a slip of the tongue during repeated poetry lectures.[5] The characteristic of orthographic satiation as opposed to semantic satiation is that meaning remains intact. It was suggested that this is different from semantic satiation and from the stimulus familiarization effect because orthographic satiation occurs after the perceivers have access to lexical meaning.[6]

gollark: Stop being unaware, please. It's in the manual.
gollark: Were you unaware of the new classification system introduced 715Ts ago?
gollark: Or β-597/A'.
gollark: Obviously something something is-ought problem, but for most terminal goals people have being right is better than not being right, all else equal.
gollark: It's a convergent instrumental goal.

See also

References

  1. Valsiner, Jaan; Veer, Rene van der (2000). The Social Mind: Construction of the Idea. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. p. 302. ISBN 0-521-58036-6.
  2. Ninose, Y; Gyoba, J (1996). "Delays produced by prolonged viewing in the recognition of Kanji characters: Analysis of the 'Gestaltzerfall' phenomenon". Shinrigaku kenkyu. 67 (3): 227–31. doi:10.4992/jjpsy.67.227. PMID 8981675.
  3. Harris, Don (2017). Engineering Psychology and Cognitive Ergonomics: Performance, Emotion and Situation Awareness: 14th International Conference, EPCE 2017, Held as Part of HCI International 2017, Vancouver, BC, Canada, July 9-14, 2017, Proceedings. Cham, Switzerland: Springer. p. 118. ISBN 978-3-319-58471-3.
  4. Faust, C. (1947). "Über Gestaltzerfall als Symptom des parieto-occipitalen Übergangsgebiets bei doppelseitiger Verletzung nach Hirnschuß". Nervenarzt (18): 103–115.
  5. Frohne-Hagemann, Isabelle (1999). Musik und Gestalt: klinische Musiktherapie als integrative Psychotherapie. Gottingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. pp. 23–24. ISBN 3-525-45850-9.
  6. Lee, Nien-Chen (2007). Perceptual Coherence of Chinese Characters: Orthographic Satiation and Disorganization (PDF) (Master's Thesis). University of Edinburgh. OCLC 726540010.


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