Larger shape built out of smaller, distinct shapes. e.g a large "N" drawn in small "a"s
A Navon figure is made of a larger recognisable shape, such as a letter, composed of copies of a smaller different shape. Navon figures are used in tests of visual neglect.[1]David Navon's research demonstrated that global features are perceived more quickly than local features.[2] Jules Davidoff also performed research, but in a remote culture, finding opposite results; the participants more readily identified the local features.[3] Patients with simultanagnosia have difficulty identifying global features, and when presented with a Navon figure will identify only the local features.[4] A 2010 study comparing global-local processing in different races,[5] found that East Asians demonstrated significantly stronger global processing than Caucasians.
Example
A letter T (global) composed of repeat copies of the letter S (local).
SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
SS SSSSS SS
SSSSS
SSSSS
SSSSS
SSSSS
SSSSS
SSSSS
SSSSSSS
SSSSSSSSSSSSS
The Navon effect
Reading Navon figures has been found to affect a range of tasks. It has been shown that just 5 minutes reading out the small letters of Navon figures has a detrimental effect on face recognition.[6][7] The size of the Navon effect has been found to be influenced by the properties of the image.[8] The effect is short lived (lasting less than a couple of minutes).[9]
The Navon effects has also been found in other tasks such as golf putting where reading the small Navon letters leads to poorer putting performance.[10]
^Perfect, Timothy J.; Weston, Nicola J.; Dennis, Ian; Snell, Amelia (2008-10-01). "The effects of precedence on Navon-induced processing bias in face recognition". The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. 61 (10): 1479–1486. doi:10.1080/17470210802034678. ISSN1747-0218. PMID18609403. S2CID42351390.
Mevorach, Carmel; Humphreys, Glyn W.; Shalev, Lilach (2006). "Opposite biases in salience-based selection for the left and right posterior parietal cortex". Nature Neuroscience. 9 (6): 740–742. doi:10.1038/nn1709. PMID16699505. S2CID39992249.