“…Crowding mainly manifests itself in peripheral vision (for foveal crowding, see Coates, Levi, Touch, & Sabesan, 2018 ; Malania, Herzog, & Westheimer, 2007 ; Sayim, Westheimer, & Herzog, 2008a ; Sayim et al, 2010 ; Sayim et al, 2011 ), limiting various capacities, ranging from reading ( Pelli, Tillman, Freeman, Su, Berger, & Majaj, 2007 ; Pelli & Tillman, 2008 ), to visual search ( Carrasco, Evert, Chang, & Katz, 1995 ; Reddy & VanRullen, 2007 ; Rosenholtz, Huang, Raj, Balas, & Ilie, 2012 ; Sayim, Westheimer & Herzog, 2011 ; Vlaskamp & Hooge, 2006 ), and object recognition ( Levi, 2008 ; Pelli & Tillman, 2008 ; Wallace & Tjan, 2011 ; Whitney & Levi, 2011 ). Although crowding is usually assumed not to affect target detection ( Chung, 2010 ; Levi, Hariharan, & Klein, 2002 ; Pelli, Palomares, & Majaj, 2004 ), parts of targets or even entire targets are often lost in crowded displays ( Coates, Bernard, & Chung, 2019 ; Sayim & Taylor, 2019 ; Sayim & Wagemans, 2017 ; Taylor & Sayim, 2020 ; Yildirim, Coates, & Sayim, 2019 ; Yildirim, Coates, & Sayim, 2020 ; Yildirim, Coates, & Sayim, 2021 ; Yildirim, Coates, & Sayim, 2022 ). A particularly strong loss was found in repeating patterns, for example, when observers report only two of three presented lines ( Yildirim, Coates, & Sayim, 2020 ; Yildirim, Coates, & Sayim, 2021 ).…”