Xcloud auf iOS: Shadow wurde Kollateralschaden für Microsoft

Um herauszufinden, warum Xcloud gegen iOS-Regeln verstößt, verwies Microsoft auf Shadow. Der Cloud-Dienst wurde daraufhin aus dem App Store entfernt. (iOS, Apple)

Um herauszufinden, warum Xcloud gegen iOS-Regeln verstößt, verwies Microsoft auf Shadow. Der Cloud-Dienst wurde daraufhin aus dem App Store entfernt. (iOS, Apple)

Schweden: Eine Million offiziell registrierte Corona-Fälle

Die Inzidenz gehört zu den höchsten in Europa; die Zahlen der täglichen Corona-Toten liegen auch im Verhältnis unter denen von Deutschland – Rückblick auf eine viel diskutierte Strategie

Die Inzidenz gehört zu den höchsten in Europa; die Zahlen der täglichen Corona-Toten liegen auch im Verhältnis unter denen von Deutschland - Rückblick auf eine viel diskutierte Strategie

Kommunikationsfreiheit statt Angst!

Klaus Beck regt an, über ein kollektives Gut nachzudenken: den freien Austausch von Ideen und Meinungen. Und er erklärt, warum uns diese Freiheit nervös macht

Klaus Beck regt an, über ein kollektives Gut nachzudenken: den freien Austausch von Ideen und Meinungen. Und er erklärt, warum uns diese Freiheit nervös macht

What cats’ love of boxes and squares can tell us about their visual perception

“Vision has evolved to answer questions having to do with boundaries and contours.”

Like most cats, nothing delights Ariel more than an empty box in which to lounge. This might tell us something about feline visual perception of shapes and contours, per a new study in Applied Animal Behaviour Science.

Enlarge / Like most cats, nothing delights Ariel more than an empty box in which to lounge. This might tell us something about feline visual perception of shapes and contours, per a new study in Applied Animal Behaviour Science. (credit: Sean Carroll)

It is a truth universally acknowledged—at least by those of the feline persuasion—that an empty box on the floor must be in want of a cat. Ditto for laundry baskets, suitcases, sinks, and even cat carriers (when not used as transport to the vet). This behavior is generally attributed to the fact that cats feel safer when squeezed into small spaces, but it might also be able to tell us something about feline visual perception. That's the rationale behind a new study in the journal Applied Animal Behaviour Science with a colorful title: "If I fits I sits: A citizen science investigation into illusory contour susceptibility in domestic cats (Felis silvers catus)."

The paper was inspired in part by a 2017 viral Twitter hashtag, #CatSquares, in which users posted pictures of their cats sitting inside squares marked out on the floor with tape—kind of a virtual box. The following year, lead author Gabriella Smith, a graduate student at Hunter College (CUNY) in New York City, attended a lecture by co-author Sarah-Elizabeth Byosiere, who heads the Thinking Dog Center at Hunter. Byosiere studies canine behavior and cognition, and she spoke about dogs' susceptibility to visual illusions.  While playing with her roommate's cat later that evening, Smith recalled the Twitter hashtag and wondered if she could find a visual illusion that looked like a square to test on cats.

Smith found it in the work of the late Italian psychologist and artist Gaetano Kanizsa, who was interested in illusory (subjective) contours that visually evoke the sense of an edge in the brain even if there isn't really a line or edge there. The Kanizsa square consists of four objects shaped like Pac-Man, oriented with the "mouth" facing inward to form the four corners of a square. Even better, there was a 1988 study that used the Kanizsa square to investigate the susceptibility of two young female cats to illusory contours. The study concluded that, yes, cats are susceptible to the Kanizsa square illusion, suggesting that they perceive subjective contours much like humans.

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