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Article

Surface Continuity and Discontinuity Bias the Perception of Stereoscopic Depth

Details

Citation

Goutcher R, Connolly E & Hibbard P (2018) Surface Continuity and Discontinuity Bias the Perception of Stereoscopic Depth. Journal of Vision, 18 (12), Art. No.: 13. https://doi.org/10.1167/18.12.13

Abstract
Binocular disparity signals can provide high acuity information about the positions of points, surfaces and objects in three-dimensional space. For some stimulus configurations, however, perceived depth is known to be affected by surface organisation. Here we examine the effects of surface continuity and discontinuity on such surface organisation biases. Participants were presented with a series of random dot surfaces, each with a cumulative Gaussian form in depth. Surfaces varied in the steepness of disparity gradients, via manipulation of the standard deviation of the Gaussian, and/or the presence of differing forms of surface discontinuity. By varying the relative disparity between surface edges, we measured the points of subjective equality (PSEs), where surfaces of differing steepness and/or discontinuity were perceptually indistinguishable. We compare our results to a model that considers sensitivity to different frequencies of disparity modulation. Across a series of experiments, the observed patterns of change in PSEs suggest that perceived depth is determined by the integration of measures of relative disparity, with a bias towards sharp changes in disparity. Such disparities increase perceived depth when they are in the same direction as the overall disparity. Conversely, perceived depth is reduced by the presence of sharp disparity changes that oppose the sign of the overall depth change.

Keywords
depth perception; depth discontinuities; stereopsis; relative disparity; disparity sensitivity;

Journal
Journal of Vision: Volume 18, Issue 12

StatusPublished
Publication date30/11/2018
Publication date online20/11/2018
Date accepted by journal02/10/2018
URL
eISSN1534-7362

People (1)

Dr Ross Goutcher

Dr Ross Goutcher

Associate Professor, Psychology

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Research centres/groups