PSEUDO and FALSE PERCEPTION is the label for a series of perceptual
mistakes and complex illusions, which should not occur in professional
photo-interpretation. They can be minimized and compensated for by
education and experience, but not completely avoided.
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Therefore we will mention them here, as it is felt that if the
operator knows the traps and pitfalls, he may avoid big errors.
We distinguish three categories of false or pseudo perceptional
effects.
n.
First, there is a group caused by the limitations of the photo- 0 %
graph, with respect to the small detail reproduction. Very small
details are not visible in the record, due to spread and low contrast,
but the operator should not conclude that the terrain does not
contain such small objects, Also two white lines on the ground may be
blurred into one line in the print; the senior photo-interpretor
gained this knowledge by experience, a student has to be told that
photos do not always be a true representation of the terrain.
Examples for the second category are easily found in the domain of
depth and height perception, where the operator may see things in an
unusual but expected manner. Correctly presented image pairs can give
a pseudo impression as to the height of some detail, e.g. water, which
is expected to be lower than the surrounding land, but in the Dutch
polders often it is higher, An inexperienced interpretor sometimes
sees the water level in the canals below the polder level. On the
other hand, many observers will not see houses pointing into the 2
ground, instead of towards the sky, if the prints are presented in the e a
wrong position (left-right reversed). This "squared" pseudo Stereoscopy
happens frequently with familiar objects.
The third category is purely of psychological nature: people see a
meaning in vague objects and configurations, which was not intended by
the designers, or simply is not there. This continuous search for a
meaning can do harm to perception as well as be of profit to the memory,
The man in the moon gives children a false impression; clouds and
castles or cows are merely interesting; the Italian "leg", and Thailand
as a part of a tiger's head may even facilitate recall of memorized
data. Since old times, animated stellar constellations allow man to
see order in the myriads of stars.
As a general principle, Vernon quotes Bartlett, who stated already
in 1932 that all our perceptions are continually characterized by
"an effort after meaning" (Vernon, 1962, p. 239).