| Literature DB >> 30671222 |
Gernot Horstmann1, Sebastian Loth1.
Abstract
If the person depicted in an image gazes at the camera or painter, a viewer perceives this as being gazed at. The viewers' perception holds irrespectively of their position relative to image. This is the Mona Lisa effect named after the subject of Leonardo's famous painting La Gioconda. The effect occurs reliably but was not tested with Mona Lisa herself. Remarkably, viewers judged Mona Lisa's gaze as directed to their right-hand side irrespectively of the image zoom, its horizontal position on screen, and the distance of the ruler that was used for measuring the gaze direction.Entities:
Keywords: Mona Lisa effect; gaze direction; picture perception
Year: 2019 PMID: 30671222 PMCID: PMC6327345 DOI: 10.1177/2041669518821702
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iperception ISSN: 2041-6695
Figure 2.The widest (30%, top) and the narrowest (70%, bottom) zoom of the image sections used as stimuli with the respective lateral displacements.
Figure 1.The red line connecting the intersections with Rulers 1 and 2 indicate Mona Lisa’s objective line of gaze (dashed). If Mona Lisa gazed at the viewer, the measurements and the perceived line of gaze would both intersect with the centre line (solid).
Figure 3.Each point marks the difference between the line of gaze directed at the participants and their responses in centimetre.