AbstractBinocular disparity is a powerful cue for the perception of depth. The accuracy with which observers can judge depth from disparity can, however, be very poor. This has been attributed to difficulties associated with the scaling of disparity to take account of distance (Johnston, 1991). We test potential strategies that could be used to improve this scaling. Using the depth-to-width ratio task introduced by Bradshaw, Parton, and Eagle (1998), observers adjusted a depth interval to match the vertical distance between two points. The first experiment examined the effect of placing additional visual stimuli between the observer and the target. Despite the potential of these stimuli to provide reliable distance information, the accuracy...
AbstractObservers generally fail to recover three-dimensional shape accurately from binocular dispar...
The binocular perception of shape and depth relations between objects can change considerably if t...
The binocular perception of shape and of depth relations between objects can change considerably if ...
Binocular disparity is a powerful cue for the perception of depth. The accuracy with which observers...
AbstractBinocular disparity is a powerful cue for the perception of depth. The accuracy with which o...
Vertical binocular disparity provides a useful source of information allowing three-dimensional (3-D...
Vertical binocular disparity provides a useful source of information allowing three-dimensional (3-...
Vertical binocular disparity provides a useful source of information allowing three-dimensional (3-D...
Observers generally fail to recover three-dimensional shape accurately from binocular disparity. Typ...
The perception of a three-dimensional shape from binocular disparity depends on the estimation of vi...
Binocular disparity is an important cue to depth, allowing us to make very fine discriminations of t...
Abstract Our perception of depth is substantially enhanced by the fact that we have binocular vision...
SummaryEstimating depth from binocular disparity is extremely precise, and the cue does not depend o...
Abstract. Perceived difference in depth between two adjacent stimuli decreases with increasing dispa...
Observers generally fail to recover three-dimensional shape accurately from binocular disparity. Typ...
AbstractObservers generally fail to recover three-dimensional shape accurately from binocular dispar...
The binocular perception of shape and depth relations between objects can change considerably if t...
The binocular perception of shape and of depth relations between objects can change considerably if ...
Binocular disparity is a powerful cue for the perception of depth. The accuracy with which observers...
AbstractBinocular disparity is a powerful cue for the perception of depth. The accuracy with which o...
Vertical binocular disparity provides a useful source of information allowing three-dimensional (3-D...
Vertical binocular disparity provides a useful source of information allowing three-dimensional (3-...
Vertical binocular disparity provides a useful source of information allowing three-dimensional (3-D...
Observers generally fail to recover three-dimensional shape accurately from binocular disparity. Typ...
The perception of a three-dimensional shape from binocular disparity depends on the estimation of vi...
Binocular disparity is an important cue to depth, allowing us to make very fine discriminations of t...
Abstract Our perception of depth is substantially enhanced by the fact that we have binocular vision...
SummaryEstimating depth from binocular disparity is extremely precise, and the cue does not depend o...
Abstract. Perceived difference in depth between two adjacent stimuli decreases with increasing dispa...
Observers generally fail to recover three-dimensional shape accurately from binocular disparity. Typ...
AbstractObservers generally fail to recover three-dimensional shape accurately from binocular dispar...
The binocular perception of shape and depth relations between objects can change considerably if t...
The binocular perception of shape and of depth relations between objects can change considerably if ...