A pioneering study by J. M. Harris and A. J. Parker (1995) found that disparity judgments using random-dot stereograms were better for stimuli composed of mixed bright and dark dots than when the dots were all bright or all dark. They attribute this to an improvement in stereo correspondence. This result is hard to explain within current models of how stereo correspondence is achieved. However, their experiment varied task difficulty by adding disparity noise. We wondered if this might challenge mechanisms subsequent to the solution of the correspondence problem rather than mechanisms that solve the correspondence problem itself. If so, this would avoid the need to modify current models of stereo correspondence. We therefore repeated Harris...
The small differences between the images formed in our left and right eyes are an important cue to t...
AbstractIn normal human subjects, evoked potentials in response to depth reversing two-color dynamic...
EARLY visual processing is organized into a number of independent channels. In the retina, increment...
Early neural mechanisms for the measurement of binocular disparity appear to operate in a manner con...
AbstractPrevious work [Prince, S. J. D, & Eagle, R. A. (1999). Size-disparity correlation in human b...
AbstractStereoscopic vision requires the correspondence problem to be solved, i.e., discarding “fals...
The binocular energy model of neural responses predicts that depth from binocular disparity might be...
AbstractIn spite of numerous studies in stereoscopic perception, it is still not clear how the visua...
AbstractPrevious data [Prince, S.J.D., & Eagle, R.A., (1999). Size-disparity correlation in human bi...
AbstractIt is well known that chromatic information can assist in solving the stereo correspondence ...
In spite of numerous studies in stereoscopic perception, it is still not clear how the visual system...
Visual images from the two eyes are transmitted to the brain. Because the eyes are horizontally sepa...
AbstractSeveral studies (Vision Research 15 (1975) 583; Perception 9 (1980) 671) have shown that bin...
AbstractStereoscopic vision is achieved by matching images in the two eyes. It is well known that th...
AbstractIt has been suggested that to resolve ambiguities implicit in binocular perception of comple...
The small differences between the images formed in our left and right eyes are an important cue to t...
AbstractIn normal human subjects, evoked potentials in response to depth reversing two-color dynamic...
EARLY visual processing is organized into a number of independent channels. In the retina, increment...
Early neural mechanisms for the measurement of binocular disparity appear to operate in a manner con...
AbstractPrevious work [Prince, S. J. D, & Eagle, R. A. (1999). Size-disparity correlation in human b...
AbstractStereoscopic vision requires the correspondence problem to be solved, i.e., discarding “fals...
The binocular energy model of neural responses predicts that depth from binocular disparity might be...
AbstractIn spite of numerous studies in stereoscopic perception, it is still not clear how the visua...
AbstractPrevious data [Prince, S.J.D., & Eagle, R.A., (1999). Size-disparity correlation in human bi...
AbstractIt is well known that chromatic information can assist in solving the stereo correspondence ...
In spite of numerous studies in stereoscopic perception, it is still not clear how the visual system...
Visual images from the two eyes are transmitted to the brain. Because the eyes are horizontally sepa...
AbstractSeveral studies (Vision Research 15 (1975) 583; Perception 9 (1980) 671) have shown that bin...
AbstractStereoscopic vision is achieved by matching images in the two eyes. It is well known that th...
AbstractIt has been suggested that to resolve ambiguities implicit in binocular perception of comple...
The small differences between the images formed in our left and right eyes are an important cue to t...
AbstractIn normal human subjects, evoked potentials in response to depth reversing two-color dynamic...
EARLY visual processing is organized into a number of independent channels. In the retina, increment...