When an object moves in three dimensions (3-D), a combination of binocular disparity and lateral motion (change in visual direction) can, in principle, be used to determine its direction. We know from previous research that observers can be very poor at judging 3-D direction (e.g. Harris, ECVP, 2000). However, we do not know whether the misperception is due to errors in the processing of visual direction or of binocular disparity. Here we tested how well observers can detect different trajectory angles when disparity, or visual direction, are varied separately. We compared two conditions. In the first, the distance moved in depth by a target (with respect to a stationary reference) was held constant at 27.3 min arc (13.2cm in depth). Trajec...
Sensory systems are faced with an essentially infinite number of possible environmental events but h...
Depth perception requires the use of an internal model of the eye-head geometry to infer distance fr...
AbstractHow is a single visual direction assigned to a binocular feature for which the left and righ...
When an object moves in three dimensions (3-D), a combination of binocular disparity and lateral mot...
When an object moves in three dimensions (3-D), a combination of binocular disparity and lateral mot...
When an object moves in three dimensions (3-D), a combination of binocular disparity and lateral mot...
In principle, information for 3-D motion perception is provided by the differences in position and m...
The eyes receive slightly different views of the world, and the differences between their images (bi...
In principle, information for 3-D motion perception is provided by the differences in position and m...
AbstractHow do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? The optic array provides info...
Sensory systems are faced with an essentially infinite number of possible environmental events but h...
How do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? Information in the optic array should...
How do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? Information in the optic array should...
How do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? Information in the optic array should...
Sensory systems are faced with an essentially infinite number of possible environmental events but h...
Sensory systems are faced with an essentially infinite number of possible environmental events but h...
Depth perception requires the use of an internal model of the eye-head geometry to infer distance fr...
AbstractHow is a single visual direction assigned to a binocular feature for which the left and righ...
When an object moves in three dimensions (3-D), a combination of binocular disparity and lateral mot...
When an object moves in three dimensions (3-D), a combination of binocular disparity and lateral mot...
When an object moves in three dimensions (3-D), a combination of binocular disparity and lateral mot...
In principle, information for 3-D motion perception is provided by the differences in position and m...
The eyes receive slightly different views of the world, and the differences between their images (bi...
In principle, information for 3-D motion perception is provided by the differences in position and m...
AbstractHow do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? The optic array provides info...
Sensory systems are faced with an essentially infinite number of possible environmental events but h...
How do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? Information in the optic array should...
How do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? Information in the optic array should...
How do we decide whether an object approaching us will hit us? Information in the optic array should...
Sensory systems are faced with an essentially infinite number of possible environmental events but h...
Sensory systems are faced with an essentially infinite number of possible environmental events but h...
Depth perception requires the use of an internal model of the eye-head geometry to infer distance fr...
AbstractHow is a single visual direction assigned to a binocular feature for which the left and righ...