Humans have a clear sense of the numerosity of elements in a surface. However, recent studies showed that the binding of features to the single elements is severely limited. By studying the relationship of depth order and perceived numerosity of overlapping, pseudotransparent surfaces, we show that the binding of elements to the surfaces is also limited. In transparent motion, anisotropies for perceived depth order and perceived numerosity were highly correlated: directions that were more likely to be perceived in the back were also more likely to be perceived as more numerous. The magnitude of anisotropies, however, was larger for depth order than for numerosity, and the correlation with eye movement anisotropies also developed earlier for...
Binocular disparity is an important cue to depth, allowing us to make very fine discriminations of t...
We propose a computational model that is consistent with human perception of depth in “ambiguous reg...
Binocular disparity is an important cue to depth, allowing us to make very fine discriminations of t...
To perceive multiple overlapping surfaces in the same location of the visual field (transparency), t...
When two overlapping, transparent surfaces move in different directions, there is ambiguity with res...
In motion transparency, one surface is very often seen on top of the other in spite of no proper dep...
Binocular disparity signals can provide high acuity information about the positions of points, surfa...
Binocular disparity signals can provide high acuity information about the positions of points, surfa...
Binocular disparity signals can provide high acuity information about the positions of points, surfa...
The judgment of surface attributes such as transparency or opacity is often considered to be a hig...
The number of elements in two stereo-surfaces parallelly overlapped in depth is overestimated compar...
AbstractThe perception of transparency in binocular vision presents a challenge for any model of ste...
The binocular energy model of neural responses predicts that depth from binocular disparity might be...
AbstractIn two experiments, observers were asked to judge the relative depth of a probe and one or t...
In four experiments we investigated the perception of numerosity in the peripheral visual field. We ...
Binocular disparity is an important cue to depth, allowing us to make very fine discriminations of t...
We propose a computational model that is consistent with human perception of depth in “ambiguous reg...
Binocular disparity is an important cue to depth, allowing us to make very fine discriminations of t...
To perceive multiple overlapping surfaces in the same location of the visual field (transparency), t...
When two overlapping, transparent surfaces move in different directions, there is ambiguity with res...
In motion transparency, one surface is very often seen on top of the other in spite of no proper dep...
Binocular disparity signals can provide high acuity information about the positions of points, surfa...
Binocular disparity signals can provide high acuity information about the positions of points, surfa...
Binocular disparity signals can provide high acuity information about the positions of points, surfa...
The judgment of surface attributes such as transparency or opacity is often considered to be a hig...
The number of elements in two stereo-surfaces parallelly overlapped in depth is overestimated compar...
AbstractThe perception of transparency in binocular vision presents a challenge for any model of ste...
The binocular energy model of neural responses predicts that depth from binocular disparity might be...
AbstractIn two experiments, observers were asked to judge the relative depth of a probe and one or t...
In four experiments we investigated the perception of numerosity in the peripheral visual field. We ...
Binocular disparity is an important cue to depth, allowing us to make very fine discriminations of t...
We propose a computational model that is consistent with human perception of depth in “ambiguous reg...
Binocular disparity is an important cue to depth, allowing us to make very fine discriminations of t...