BraddickO. J. (2018).
Illusion research: An infantile disorder?Perception,
47, 805–806.
3.
FujitaK.NakamuraN.WatanabeS. (2017). Visual illusion in a comparative perspective. In ShapiroA. G. &TodorovicD. (Eds), The Oxford compendium of visual illusions (pp. 54–63).
Oxford, England:
Oxford University Press.
4.
GregoryR. L. (1966). Eye and Brain.
London, England:
Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
5.
PurkyněJ. E. (1825). Beobachtungen und Versuche zur Physiologie der Sinne. Vol. 2.
Prague, Czech Republic:
Calve.
6.
RogersB. J. (2017). Where have all the illusions gone? A critique of the illusion concept. In ShapiroA. G. &TodorovicD. (Eds), The Oxford compendium of visual illusions (pp. 144–156).
Oxford, England:
Oxford University Press.
7.
RogersB. J.GyaniA. (2010).
Binocular disparities, motion parallax, and geometric perspective in Patrick Hughes’s ‘reverspectives’: Theoretical analysis and empirical findings. Perception,
39, 330–348.
8.
ShapiroA. G. (2018).
Visual illusions: Nothing to lose but your chains – A reply to Oliver Braddick. Perception,
47, 901–904.
9.
ShapiroA. G.TodorovicD. (2017). The Oxford compendium of visual illusions.
Oxford, England:
Oxford University Press.
10.
TodorovicD. (2018).
In defence of illusions: A reply to Braddick (2018). Perception,
47, 905–908.
11.
van BurenB.SchollB. J. (2018).
Visual illusions as a tool for dissociating seeing from thinking: A reply to Braddick (2018). Perception,
47, 999–1001.