Infant Macaque Monkeys Respond to Pictorial Depth

1993 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 93-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
Virginia M. Gunderson ◽  
Albert Yonas ◽  
Patricia L. Sargent ◽  
Kimberly S. Grant-Webster

The studies described here are the first to demonstrate that a nonhuman primate species is capable of responding to pictorial depth information during infancy. In two experiments, pigtailed macaque ( Macaca nemestrina) infants were tested for responsivity to the pictorial depth cues of texture gradient/linear perspective and relative size. The procedures were adapted from human studies and are based on the proclivity of infants to reach more frequently to closer objects than to objects that are farther away. The stimulus displays included two equidistant objects that, when viewed monocularly, appear separated in space because of an illusion created by pictorial depth cues. When presented with these displays, animals reached significantly more often to the apparently closer objects under monocular conditions than under binocular conditions. These findings suggest that infant macaques are sensitive to pictorial depth information, the implication being that this ability has ancient phylogenetic origins and is not learned from exposure to the conventions of Western art.

1997 ◽  
Vol 6 (5) ◽  
pp. 513-531 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Troy Surdick ◽  
Elizabeth T. Davis ◽  
Robert A. King ◽  
Larry F. Hodges

The ability effectively and accurately to simulate distance in virtual and augmented reality systems is a challenge currently facing R&D. To examine this issue, we separately tested each of seven visual depth cues (relative brightness, relative size, relative height, linear perspective, foreshortening, texture gradient, and stereopsis) as well as the condition in which all seven of these cues were present and simultaneously providing distance information in a simulated display. The viewing distances were 1 and 2 m. In developing simulated displays to convey distance and depth there are three questions that arise. First, which cues provide effective depth information (so that only a small change in the depth cue results in a perceived change in depth)? Second, which cues provide accurate depth information (so that the perceived distance of two equidistant objects perceptually matches)? Finally, how does the effectiveness and accuracy of these depth cues change as a function of the viewing distance? Ten college-aged subjects were tested with each depth-cue condition at both viewing distances. They were tested using a method of constant stimuli procedure and a modified Wheat-stone stereoscopic display. The perspective cues (linear perspective, foreshortening, and texture gradient) were found to be more effective than other depth cues, while effectiveness of relative brightness was vastly inferior. Moreover, relative brightness, relative height, and relative size all significantly decreased in effectiveness with an increase in viewing distance. The depth cues did not differ in terms of accuracy at either viewing distance. Finally, some subjects experienced difficulty in rapidly perceiving distance information provided by stereopsis, but no subjects had difficulty in effectively and accurately perceiving distance with the perspective information used in our experiment. A second experiment demonstrated that a previously stereo-anomalous subject could be trained to perceive stereoscopic depth in a binocular display. We conclude that the use of perspective cues in simulated displays may be more important than the other depth cues tested because these cues are the most effective and accurate cues at both viewing distances, can be easily perceived by all subjects, and can be readily incorporated into simpler, less complex displays (e.g., biocular HMDs) or more complex ones (e.g., binocular or see-through HMDs).


Author(s):  
R. Troy Surdick ◽  
Elizabeth T. Davis ◽  
Robert A. King ◽  
Gregory M. Corso ◽  
Alexander Shapiro ◽  
...  

We tested seven visual depth cues (relative brightness, relative size, relative height, linear perspective, foreshortening, texture gradient, and stereopsis) at viewing distances of one and two meters to answer two questions. First, which cues provide effective depth information (i.e., only a small change in the depth cue results in a noticeable change in perceived depth). Second, how does the effectiveness of these depth cues change as a function of the viewing distance? Six college-aged subjects were tested with each depth cue at both viewing distances. They were tested using a method of constant stimuli procedure and a modified Wheatstone stereoscopic display. Accuracies for perceptual match settings for all cues were very high (mean constant errors were near zero), and no cues were significantly more or less accurate than any others. Effectiveness of the perspective cues (linear perspective, foreshortening, and texture gradient) was superior to that of other depth cues, while effectiveness of relative brightness was vastly inferior. Moreover, stereopsis, among the more effective cues at one meter, was significantly less so at two meters. These results have theoretical implications for models of human spatial perception and practical implications for the design and development of 3D virtual environments.


Perception ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 177-185 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacques Chevrier ◽  
André Delorme

The aim of the experiment was to study the evolution with age (6, 8, 11 and 14 years) of pictorial depth perception in Pandora's box and to compare it with the evolution of size illusion with the same subjects and the same pictorial backgrounds. In addition to familiar size and relative position, each pictorial stimulus contained one or more of the following depth cues: linear perspective, texture gradient, and interposition. The two kinds of measurements produced different results. Size illusions, although present, did not vary with age but increased with the number of cues. Estimates of distance in Pandora's box increased with age and varied according to the type of cue present: texture gradient seemed to be critical to the amount of depth perceived. The correlation between size adjustments and distance adjustments was significant only for the two oldest groups of subjects (11 and 14 years).


Psihologija ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 389-409 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vesna Vidakovic ◽  
Suncica Zdravkovic

Multiple-object-tracking tasks require an observer to track a group of identical objects moving in 2D space. The current study was conducted in an attempt to examine object tracking in 3D space. We were interested in testing influence of classical depth cues (texture gradients, relative size and contrast) on tracking. In Experiment 1 we varied the presence of these depth cues while subjects were tracking four (out of eight) identical, moving objects. Texture gradient, a cue related to scene layout, did not influence object tracking. Experiment 2 was designed to clarify the differences between contrast and relative size effects. Results revealed that contrast was a more effective cue for multiple object tracking in 3D scenes. The effect of occlusion was also examined. Several occluders, presented in the scene, were occasionally masking the targets. Tracking was more successful when occluders were arranged in different depth planes, mimicking more natural conditions. Increasing the number of occlusions led to poorer performance.


Perception ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 147-163 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen Palmer ◽  
Edward Simone ◽  
Paul Kube

Three experiments are reported in which it is tested whether the Gestalt effect of configural orientation on shape perception operates on two-dimensional (2-D) or three-dimensional (3-D) representations of space. It is known that gravitationally defined squares and diamonds take longer to discriminate in diagonal arrays than in horizontal or vertical arrays. In the first experiment it is shown that this interference effect decreases dramatically in magnitude when pictorial depth information is added so that subjects perceive the target shapes in different depth planes. In the second experiment this difference is shown not to be due to relative size of the target shapes or to occlusion of a background plane. It is also shown, in the final experiment, that this difference is not due to linear perspective information or merely to perception of the target figures in a 3-D scene. The overall pattern of results supports the position that this configural reference frame effect arises primarily when the elements of the configuration are coplanar, and that the principal organization underlying it is the structure of the perceived 3-D environment rather than that of the 2-D image. In all three experiments, however, there is also a small interference effect in the noncoplanar 3-D conditions. This might be due either to some aspect of reference frame selection operating on the 2-D image representation or to the failure of subjects to see depth in the 3-D stimuli on some proportion of the trials.


Author(s):  
Robert A. King ◽  
Greg E. Fujawa ◽  
Kelly G. Elliott

The perceived size of a stimulus can be greatly influenced by the surrounding depth cues. The effect size of the Ponzo Illusion was tested in a virtual environment with many depth cues (MC) and few depth cues (FC) conditions. The effect of size and the depth cues on the perceived proximal size of the stimulus was measured. Methods. A modified Wheatstone stereoscope was used to present the stimuli on a monitor positioned 80 cm from the subjects. The subjects used a 6AFC confidence rating scale to indicate whether the first or second of two sequentially presented stimuli had a greater proximal extent. The ‘many cues’ (MC) condition included texture, relative height, foreshortening, linear perspective, relative brightness, and relative size. The few cues condition consisted of linear perspective, relative height, and relative size. Stimulus size (proximal extent) was varied independently from all other depth cues. Results. Both depth cue context and proximal size were found to have a significant effect on the perceived proximal size for FC conditions. However, for MC conditions only the depth cues, and not proximal size, had an effect on perceived proximal size. The effect size for both depth cues and proximal size had a significant linear trend. But proximal size had a larger trend that was significantly related to the size constancy function.


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