scholarly journals Visual Perception: Monovision Can Bias the Apparent Depth of Moving Objects

2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (15) ◽  
pp. R738-R740
Author(s):  
Jenny C.A. Read
2010 ◽  
Vol 104 (5) ◽  
pp. 2886-2899 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thaddeus B. Czuba ◽  
Bas Rokers ◽  
Alexander C. Huk ◽  
Lawrence K. Cormack

Two binocular cues are thought to underlie the visual perception of three-dimensional (3D) motion: a disparity-based cue, which relies on changes in disparity over time, and a velocity-based cue, which relies on interocular velocity differences. The respective building blocks of these cues, instantaneous disparity and retinal motion, exhibit very distinct spatial and temporal signatures. Although these two cues are synchronous in naturally moving objects, disparity-based and velocity-based mechanisms can be dissociated experimentally. We therefore investigated how the relative contributions of these two cues change across a range of viewing conditions. We measured direction-discrimination sensitivity for motion though depth across a wide range of eccentricities and speeds for disparity-based stimuli, velocity-based stimuli, and “full cue” stimuli containing both changing disparities and interocular velocity differences. Surprisingly, the pattern of sensitivity for velocity-based stimuli was nearly identical to that for full cue stimuli across the entire extent of the measured spatiotemporal surface and both were clearly distinct from those for the disparity-based stimuli. These results suggest that for direction discrimination outside the fovea, 3D motion perception primarily relies on the velocity-based cue with little, if any, contribution from the disparity-based cue.


Author(s):  
Maggie Shiffrar

The accurate visual perception of an object’s motion requires the simultaneous integration of motion information arising from that object along with the segmentation of motion information from other objects. When moving objects are seen through apertures, or viewing windows, the resultant illusions highlight some of the challenges that the visual system faces as it balances motion segmentation with motion integration. One example is the barber pole Illusion, in which lines appear to translate orthogonally to their true direction of emotion. Another is the illusory perception of incoherence when simple rectilinear objects translate or rotate behind disconnected apertures. Studies of these illusions suggest that visual motion processes frequently rely on simple form cues.


Author(s):  
Indra Adji Sulistijono ◽  
◽  
Naoyuki Kubota ◽  
◽  
◽  
...  

This paper compares particle swarm optimization and a genetic algorithm for perception by a partner robot. The robot requires visual perception to interact with human beings. It should basically extract moving objects using visual perception in interaction with human beings. To reduce computational cost and time consumption, we used differential extraction. We propose human head tracking for a partner robot using particle swarm optimization and a genetic algorithm. Experiments involving two maximum iteration numbers show that particle swarm optimization is more effective in solving this problem than genetic algorithm.


Author(s):  
Marta Macchi ◽  
Livia Nicoletta Rossi ◽  
Ivan Cortinovis ◽  
Lucia Menegazzo ◽  
Sandra Maria Burri ◽  
...  

1981 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 228-228
Author(s):  
Julian Hochberg
Keyword(s):  

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