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Hung G K - - 1997
The dynamic characteristics of horizontal convergence and divergence eye movement responses to symmetric stimuli were examined. Binocular eye movements were recorded in five, visually normal adult subjects using the infrared reflection technique for symmetric convergent and divergent blur-free, disparity-only, step stimuli of 2, 4, 8, 12, and 16 deg. The ...
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Goodenough B - - 1997
Following J. J. Gibson (1950), it is implicitly assumed in the literature that texture gradients are directly available as perceptual primitives. Yet, the depth response to compression gradients is poor compared with gradients of linear perspective. This may indicate that mechanisms for directly detecting the differential structure that constitutes a ...
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Turner J - - 1997
The ability to detect surfaces was studied in a multiple-cue condition in which binocular disparity and motion parallax could specify independent depth configurations. On trials on which binocular disparity and motion parallax were presented together, either binocular disparity or motion parallax could indicate a surface in one of two intervals; ...
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Cesaretti G - - 1997
The extension of the binocular visual field of pigeons is measured using a pecking behavioral method. Our estimate of the binocular field derived at the animal near point of accommodation indicates a 50 degrees width on the horizontal axis and more than 50 degrees on the vertical axis. Within the ...
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van Damme W - - 1997
To determine the physical size and global three-dimensional (3-D) shape of an object, retinal size and retinal disparity have to be scaled in accordance with the object's distance. We examined whether the distance used for scaling retinal disparity is the same as the distance used for scaling retinal size. Subjects ...
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Jiménez J R - - 1997
The present work examines the relationship between random-dot stereograms (via the disparity range parameter) and color-vision mechanisms (via the luminance channel and red-green and tritan directions at isoluminance). The results clearly indicate that the variations in the stereograms along red-green confusion lines contribute to stereopsis. Stereoscopic perception depends on spatial ...
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Lunn P D - - 1997
Observers discriminated the relative disparity, disparity gradient, and disparity curvature of surfaces defined by horizontal binocular disparity in random-dot stereograms. In experiment 1, thresholds for discriminating the depth of sinusoidal corrugations were very similar for different corrugation frequencies, despite large differences in disparity gradient and disparity curvature. Thus observers used ...
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Landers D D - - 1997
In three experiments, asymmetries between the processing of crossed and uncrossed disparities were investigated. The target was a luminance-defined circle concentric to a fixation mark, viewed stereoscopically on a computer monitor for 105 msec. Fifteen disparities were presented according to the method of constant stimuli. Observers indicated the apparent direction ...
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Kaneko H - - 1997
We investigated whether vertical-shear disparity was extracted from the whole visual field or from a more local area and how global estimates of vertical disparity are derived. We also investigated the role of cyclovergence in processing shear disparity. Random-dot stereoscopic displays in various configurations were presented with horizontal-shear disparity, vertical-shear ...
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Portfors-Yeomans C V - - 1997
Thresholds for discriminating a monocularly visible object's direction of motion in depth and speed of motion in depth were measured using only binocular cues. Observers could discriminate the direction of motion in depth while totally ignoring speed and discriminate the speed of motion in depth while totally ignoring direction. Direction ...
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Ning Qian
Many models for stereo disparity computation have been proposed, but few can be said to be truly biological. There is also a rich literature devoted to physiological studies of stereopsis. Cells sensitive to binocular disparity have been found in the visual cortex, but it is not clear whether these cells ...
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Todorović D - - 1997
The lightness of a test patch completely surrounded by an inducing field can be predicted by variants of Wallach's ratio rule. When a patch is surrounded by two or more regions with different luminances, a plausible extension of the ratio rule would predict that the effect of the surrounding regions ...
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Smallman H S - - 1997
How are binocular disparities encoded and represented in the human visual system? An 'encoding cube' diagram is introduced to visualise differences between competing models. To distinguish the models experimentally, the depth-increment-detection function (discriminating disparity d from d +/- delta d) was measured as a function of standing disparity (d) with ...
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Todd J T - - 1997
Observers viewed computer-generated stereograms of randomly structured smooth surfaces and were required to judge the perceived local orientation at numerous probe points by adjusting a monocular gauge figure. The surfaces were depicted with specular or Lambertian reflectance functions, either with or without identifiable texture elements, and with varying directions of ...
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O'Shea R P - - 1997
Studies have shown that blur can act as a pictorial cue to depth perception. But blurring a stimulus reduces its contrast, and studies have also shown that contrast can act as a pictorial cue to depth perception. To determine whether blur and contrast have separate influences on depth perception, each ...
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Mallot H A - - 1997
The problem of spatial scale in depth perception can be considered at three stages: image input, mechanisms, and depth descriptors specific for certain tasks. A review is presented of a number of earlier experiments supporting the distinction between a coarse, correlation-based mechanism and a feature-matching mechanism of stereopsis in terms ...
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Pierce B J - - 1997
We examined (i) perceived slant of a textured surface about a vertical axis as a function of disparity magnitude for horizontal-size disparity, vertical-size disparity, and overall-size disparity; and (ii) interactions between patterns with various types and magnitudes of size disparity and superimposed or adjacent zero-disparity stimuli. Horizontal-size disparity produced slant ...
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Jobling J T - - 1997
Can people with different forms of low vision use motion parallax to improve depth judgments? We used a staircase method to compare depth thresholds using motion parallax and static viewing. We tested eighteen normal-vision subjects with a range of simulated deficits in acuity, contrast sensitivity, and simulated peripheral-field loss, and ...
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Kaneko H - - 1997
An experiment was conducted to investigate the effects of perspective cue and binocular disparity on perceived angular and linear size. Following the 'angular' and 'linear' instructions, subjects matched the size of two squares, for which the binocular disparity between the centers of the squares and the configuration of the stimulus ...
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Szatmary J - - 1997
Rogers and Graham (1979) developed a system to show that head-movement-contingent motion parallax produces monocular depth perception in random dot patterns. Their display system comprised an oscilloscope driven by function generators or a special graphics board that triggered the X and Y deflection of the raster scan signal. Replication of ...
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Dijkerman H C - - 1996
Previous studies have reported that the visual form agnosic D.F. is able to use information about visual targets for the control of motor acts, but has great difficulty in using the same visual information for perceptual report. This intact visuomotor performance may be mediated by relatively intact parieto-frontal cortical mechanisms. ...
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Häkkinen J - - 1996
We investigated processes that determine the depth localization of monocular points which have no unambiguous depth. It is known that horizontally adjacent binocular objects are used in depth localization and for a distance of 25-40 min arc monocular points localize to the leading edge of a depth constraint zone, which ...
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Essock E A - - 1996
PURPOSE: This study investigated whether certain binocular mechanisms are disrupted in early glaucoma. METHODS: Glaucoma patients, suspects, and normals were tested on a battery of psychophysical tests consisting of flicker sensitivity (5 and 34 Hz), temporal cut-off frequency (CFF), contrast sensitivity (Pelli-Robson chart), and stereoacuity. Monocular channels were evaluated with ...
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Bradshaw M F - - 1996
Depth from binocular disparity and motion parallax has traditionally been assumed to be the product of separate and independent processes. We report two experiments which used classical psychophysical paradigms to test this assumption. The first tested whether there was an elevation in the thresholds for detecting the 3D structure of ...
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Schor C M - - 1996
BACKGROUND: Binocular night vision goggles that have a monocular symbology overlay provide potential conflicts between perceived symbology distance and optical vergence cues for accommodation. HYPOTHESIS: Accommodative response was measured in subjects who perceived symbology nearer than the background to determine if accommodation could respond to the optical stimulus and override ...
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Palmisano S - - 1996
During self-motions, different patterns of optic flow are presented to the left and right eyes. Previous research has, however, focused mainly on the self-motion information contained in a single pattern of optic flow. The present experiments investigated the role that binocular disparity plays in the visual perception of self-motion, showing ...
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Saitoh Y - - 1996
PURPOSE: We present a new stimulating pattern: double burst stimulation2,3 (DBS2,3) for evaluating residual neuromuscular block. METHODS: Forty adult patients were studied. For DBS2,3, two burst stimuli were applied every 750 msec. The first consisted of two tetanic stimuli of 0.2 msec duration and the second of three tetanic stimuli ...
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Piggins D - - 1996
Here a new depth effect evoked by the spatial and temporal interaction in 2-D of a slowly moving circle (optimally at 0.6 rads/sec) with an identical static circle is reported. Typically, respondents report that with increasing adjacency, commencing with separations of a few diameters, the moving circle appears in a ...
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Crawford M L - - 1996
Young macaques discriminated apparent depths of targets embedded in dynamic random dot stereograms; a test of stereopsis. In a 'same/different' paradigm, the discrimination took longer if the pair of stimuli appeared to be in same depth plane, than when they appeared to be located in a different depth plane. The ...
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Cormack L K - - 1996
Stereopsis relies principally on the extraction of horizontal retinal disparities. As such, we assume that the vertical contours (i.e., horizontal contrast energy) are of principle import for stereopsis. Yet there are theoretical reasons for believing that horizontal contours should be involved in binocular matching (if not stereopsis proper) as well. ...
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van Ee R - - 1996
We investigated Werner's binocular depth-contrast effect. Subjects viewed stereograms consisting of a test pattern and an inducing pattern. The half-images of the inducing pattern were either horizontally scaled or sheared relative to each other. Subjects judged the (induced) perceived slant of the test pattern. We were interested in what influence ...
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Whalen D H - - 1996
The telling fact about duplex perception is that listeners integrate into a unitary phonetic percept signals that are coherent from a phonetic point of view, even though the signals are, on purely auditory grounds, separate sources. Here we explore the limits on the integration of a sinusoidal consonant cue (the ...
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Halpern D L - - 1996
Based on data obtained using one-dimensional noise patterns, Tyler & Sutter (1979). (Vision Research, 19, 859-865) concluded that stereoscopic tilt can result from an interocular spatial frequency difference in the absence of consistent horizontal disparity. We tested stereopsis using two-dimensional random-dot patterns that were bandpass filtered to contain 1.0 octave ...
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Reinhardt-Rutland A H - - 1996
Some perceptual motor operations are performed remotely; examples include the handling of life-threatening materials and surgical procedures. A camera conveys the site of operation to a TV monitor, so depth perception relies mainly on pictorial information, perhaps with enhancement of the occlusion cue by motion. However, motion information such as ...
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Ballesteros S - - 1996
In a series of experiments observers judged whether two visual tachistoscopically presented shapes were the same or different in a relevant dimension, and had to ignore the graded variation on an irrelevant dimension that appeared concurrently with the relevant dimension. Experimental results from judgments in orientation, size and brightness failed ...
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Bradshaw M F - - 1996
The present study compared the relative effectiveness of differential perspective and vergence angle manipulations in scaling depth from horizontal disparities. When differential perspective and vergence angle were manipulated together (to simulate a range of different viewing distances from 28 cm to infinity), approximately 35% of the scaling required for complete ...
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Patterson R - - 1996
Across five experiments this study investigated the disparity tuning of the stereoscopic motion aftereffect (adaptation from moving retinal disparity). Adapting and test stimuli were moving and stationary stereoscopic grating patterns, respectively, created from dynamic random-dot stereograms. Observers adapted to moving stereoscopic grating patterns presented with a given disparity and viewed ...
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Nawrot M - - 1996
The visual system uses a variety of cues for form perception, including motion, color, binocular disparity, texture, and luminance. Physiological evidence suggests that these cues are processed by different neural mechanisms. Do the cues processed by some mechanisms convey any advantage for form perception when compared to cues processed by ...
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Kumar T - - 1996
Simple stereograms are used to show that the binocular matching of closely spaced vertical lines can be changed by horizontally connecting some of the vertical lines. The matching that is seen can be gradually changed by incremental modifications to simple visual quantities like the luminance contrast of a local region, ...
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Gray R - - 1996
For cyclopean and monocularly-visible targets we measured psychophysical thresholds for perceptions produced by the following three stimuli: oscillations of disparity (DO), oscillations of size (SO) and oscillatory motion within the frontoparallel plane (FPO). RESULTS: thresholds for motion in depth perception produced by DO were similar for cyclopean and non-cyclopean targets ...
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Lankheet M J - - 1996
We measured sensitivity to binocular correlation in dynamic random-dot stereograms that defined moving sinusoidal gratings-in-depth. At a range of spatial frequencies and drift rates we established sensitivity by adding Gaussian distributed disparity noise to the modulation of disparity that defined a cyclopean grating, and finding the noise amplitude that rendered ...
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Ichikawa M - - 1996
Two experiments presented motion disparity conflicting with binocular disparity to examine how these cues determined apparent depth order (convex, concave) and depth magnitude. In each experiment, 8 subjects estimated the depth order and depth magnitude. The first experiment showed the following. (1) The visual system used one of these cues ...
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Reinhardt-Rutland A H - - 1996
When an observer judges the orientation in depth of a trapezoidal surface, the pictorial information of the surface is often more influential than motion information. Motion information might be more effective if pictorial information is simplified: this prompts the present study. Surfaces were triangular and pictorial information resided only in ...
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McCormack G - - 1996
A physiological model of prism adaptation argues that adaptation magnitude and rate are functions of the magnitude of reflex vergence innervation. It has also been shown that there is reduced prism adaptation magnitude for a given disparity stimulus where only peripheral sensory fusion is present (the 'eccentricity effect'). This study ...
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Norman J F - - 1996
The ability of observers to discriminate depth and orientation differences between separated local regions on object surfaces was examined. The objects were defined by many optical sources of information simultaneously, including shading, texture, motion, and binocular disparity. Despite the full-cue nature of the displays, the observers' performance was relatively poor, ...
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Van Ee R - - 1996
We investigate temporal aspects of binocular slant perception in the presence and absence of a visual reference. Subjects judge slant induced by large-field stereograms of which one half-image is either horizontally scaled or sheared relative to the other half-image. Each stimulus is presented for different observation periods ranging from 0.1 ...
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Adams W - - 1996
Two experiments are described in which the effects of scaling vertical disparities on the perceived amplitudes of dome-shaped surfaces depicted with horizontal disparities were examined. The Mayhew and Longuet-Higgins's theory and the regional-disparity-correction theory of Garding et al predict that scaling should generate a change in perceived depth appropriate to ...
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Reinhardt-Rutland A H - - 1996
Although data from simulations suggest that motion information and binocular information each elicit veridical depth perception, data from real stimuli, such as trapezoidal surfaces, are equivocal; the discrepancy might be explained by the complexity of nonveridical pictorial information in the latter. In the present study, observers judged the orientations-in-depth of ...
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Morris R C - - 1996
The visual system uses shadows to compute perceived depth of features on an uneven surface, and in doing so makes the assumption of a single light source in most circumstances. Three illusory depth effects are described (depth reversal, accentuation, and flattening) that can be demonstrated with 3-D materials, and all ...
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Meese T S - - 1995
Motion parallax provides cues to the three-dimensional layout of a viewed scene and, in particular, to surface tilt and slant. For example, as a textured surface, inclined around a horizontal axis, translates horizontally relative to an observer's view point, then, in the absence of head and eye movements, the observer's ...
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