“…In contrast to this effect after adaptations to distorted faces, no such adaptation effect followed the presentation of original face images (i.e., distorted faces still appeared distorted). In this way, Webster and MacLin provided among the first evidence for adaptation effects in complex, natural objects, suggesting that adaptation may play an important normalizing role in face perception and adaptation effects may strongly influence form perception (see also Zhao and Chubb, 2001; Morikawa, 2005; Yamashita et al, 2005; Jeffery et al, 2006, 2007; Jaquet et al, 2007, 2008; Robbins et al, 2007; Jaquet and Rhodes, 2008; Burkhardt et al, 2010; Hills et al, 2010); such a “complex” adaptation phenomenon was recently transferred to animals, trees, or every-day objects (e.g., light bulb; Daelli et al, 2010). …”