Visual perception is fundamentally ambiguous because an infinite number of three-dimensional scenes are consistent with our retinal images. To circumvent these ambiguities, the visual system uses prior knowledge such as the assumption that light is coming from above our head. The use of such assumptions is rational when these assumptions are related to statistical regularities of our environment. In confirmation of previous visual search experiments, we demonstrate here that the assumption on the illumination position is in fact biased to the above-left rather than directly above. This bias to the left reaches 26 degrees on average in a more direct shape discrimination task. Both right-handed and left-handed observers have a similar leftwar...
In order to make sense of complex and ambiguous visual input, the visual system makes use of prior k...
Studies of visual search performance with shaded stimuli, in which the target is rotated by 180º rel...
It has been known for a long time that many cues contribute to the perception of 3D shape from 2D im...
The human visual system has learned to assume that light originates from above, most likely because ...
Faced with highly complex and ambiguous visual input, human observers must rely on prior knowledge a...
The “light-from-above” prior is invoked to simplify and expedite complex visual processing. This pri...
Figure 1: Example stimulus shown with three different lighting positions. The light is positioned ab...
The human visual system uses a-priori constraints for the estimation of surface shape from images. W...
It is well-known that the human visual system uses a light-from-above assumption when it interprets ...
Perception of shaded three-dimensional figures is inherently ambiguous, but this ambiguity can be re...
When we interpret a shaded picture as a three-dimensional (3D) scene, our visual system often needs ...
We investigate the ability of human observers to judge the direction of illumination from image text...
<p>Human observers are able to successfully infer direction and intensity of light from photographed...
In environments where orientation is ambiguous, the visual system uses prior knowledge about lightin...
When observers view an image, their initial eye movements are not equally distributed but instead ar...
In order to make sense of complex and ambiguous visual input, the visual system makes use of prior k...
Studies of visual search performance with shaded stimuli, in which the target is rotated by 180º rel...
It has been known for a long time that many cues contribute to the perception of 3D shape from 2D im...
The human visual system has learned to assume that light originates from above, most likely because ...
Faced with highly complex and ambiguous visual input, human observers must rely on prior knowledge a...
The “light-from-above” prior is invoked to simplify and expedite complex visual processing. This pri...
Figure 1: Example stimulus shown with three different lighting positions. The light is positioned ab...
The human visual system uses a-priori constraints for the estimation of surface shape from images. W...
It is well-known that the human visual system uses a light-from-above assumption when it interprets ...
Perception of shaded three-dimensional figures is inherently ambiguous, but this ambiguity can be re...
When we interpret a shaded picture as a three-dimensional (3D) scene, our visual system often needs ...
We investigate the ability of human observers to judge the direction of illumination from image text...
<p>Human observers are able to successfully infer direction and intensity of light from photographed...
In environments where orientation is ambiguous, the visual system uses prior knowledge about lightin...
When observers view an image, their initial eye movements are not equally distributed but instead ar...
In order to make sense of complex and ambiguous visual input, the visual system makes use of prior k...
Studies of visual search performance with shaded stimuli, in which the target is rotated by 180º rel...
It has been known for a long time that many cues contribute to the perception of 3D shape from 2D im...