It is known that the perceived slants of large distal surfaces, such as hills, are exaggerated and that the exaggeration increases with distance. In a series of two experiments, we parametrically investigated the effect of viewing distance and slant on perceived slant using a high-fidelity virtual environment. An explicit numerical estimation method and an implicit aspect-ratio approach were separately used to assess the perceived optical slant of simulated large-scale surfaces with different slants and viewing distances while gaze direction was fixed. The results showed that perceived optical slant increased logarithmically with viewing distance and the increase was proportionally greater for shallow slants. At each viewing distance, perce...
AbstractThe slant of a stereoscopically defined surface cannot be determined solely from horizontal ...
The horizontal–vertical illusion, in which the vertical dimension is overestimated relative to...
A general model of visual slant underestimation is presented. It is based on the idea that two speci...
Although it is widely believed that perception must be veridical for action to be accurate, an alter...
It has long been known that the perceived aspect ratio of two perpendicular extents is not veridical...
The geographical slants of hills are known to appear quite exaggerated. Here, we examine the visual ...
The geographical slants of hills are known to appear quite exaggerated. Here, we examine the visual ...
Previous studies have shown that visual perception of geographical slant is greatly overestimated (P...
technical reportFour experiments varied the extent and nature of observer movement in a virtual envi...
When one looks at a spot on level ground, the local optical slant (i.e., surface orientation relativ...
Three studies, involving a total of 145 observers examined quantitative theories of the overestimati...
A dramatic failure of orientation constancy is documented in the perception of downhill slopes. Cont...
AbstractObservers judged the apparent signs and magnitudes of surface slant from monocular textured ...
Simulated environments often seem too small. Attempts to improve the perception of scale often invol...
The slant of a stereoscopically defined surface cannot be determined solely from horizontal disparit...
AbstractThe slant of a stereoscopically defined surface cannot be determined solely from horizontal ...
The horizontal–vertical illusion, in which the vertical dimension is overestimated relative to...
A general model of visual slant underestimation is presented. It is based on the idea that two speci...
Although it is widely believed that perception must be veridical for action to be accurate, an alter...
It has long been known that the perceived aspect ratio of two perpendicular extents is not veridical...
The geographical slants of hills are known to appear quite exaggerated. Here, we examine the visual ...
The geographical slants of hills are known to appear quite exaggerated. Here, we examine the visual ...
Previous studies have shown that visual perception of geographical slant is greatly overestimated (P...
technical reportFour experiments varied the extent and nature of observer movement in a virtual envi...
When one looks at a spot on level ground, the local optical slant (i.e., surface orientation relativ...
Three studies, involving a total of 145 observers examined quantitative theories of the overestimati...
A dramatic failure of orientation constancy is documented in the perception of downhill slopes. Cont...
AbstractObservers judged the apparent signs and magnitudes of surface slant from monocular textured ...
Simulated environments often seem too small. Attempts to improve the perception of scale often invol...
The slant of a stereoscopically defined surface cannot be determined solely from horizontal disparit...
AbstractThe slant of a stereoscopically defined surface cannot be determined solely from horizontal ...
The horizontal–vertical illusion, in which the vertical dimension is overestimated relative to...
A general model of visual slant underestimation is presented. It is based on the idea that two speci...