AbstractConsider a stereoscopic display simulating two rectangular patches, the lower frontoparallel and the upper slanted around the vertical axis. When the two patches are amodally completed and appear as the unoccluded parts of a smooth surface partially hidden by a foreground frontoparallel surface, either real or illusory, their relative slant is underestimated with respect to a baseline condition in which they are perceived as separate rectangles. Slant assimilation was studied in three experiments using with- vs. without-occluder displays and two methods, slant matching and speeded classification of twist direction. In Experiments 1 and 2 we found slant assimilation in with-occluder displays and slant contrast in without-occluder dis...
Gradients of absolute binocular disparity across a slanted surface are often considered the basis fo...
Observers frequently underestimate the in-depth slant of rectangles under reduction conditions. This...
In images of textured three-dimensional surfaces, pattern changes can be characterized as changes in...
AbstractConsider a stereoscopic display simulating two rectangular patches, the lower frontoparallel...
In a stereo display simulating two rectangles, the lower frontoparallel and the upper slanted around...
Stereoscopic slant perception around a vertical axis (horizontal slant) is often found to be strongl...
Perceived stereoscopic slant around a vertical axis is strongly underestimated for isolated surfaces...
Rotating a surface about a horizontal axis alters the retinal horizontal-shear disparities. Opposed ...
Consider two vertically adjacent random dot surfaces twisted 20° around the vertical axis and underg...
With few exceptions (Fantoni et al, 2008; Fulvio et al, 2009) the amodal completion of angles has be...
AbstractA compelling impression of surface slant is produced by random dot displays depicting deform...
The horizontal–vertical illusion, in which the vertical dimension is overestimated relative to the h...
AbstractGradients of absolute binocular disparity across a slanted surface are often considered the ...
AbstractThe horizontal–vertical illusion, in which the vertical dimension is overestimated relative ...
When the vertex of an occluded angle geometrically belongs to the side of the occluding surface, the...
Gradients of absolute binocular disparity across a slanted surface are often considered the basis fo...
Observers frequently underestimate the in-depth slant of rectangles under reduction conditions. This...
In images of textured three-dimensional surfaces, pattern changes can be characterized as changes in...
AbstractConsider a stereoscopic display simulating two rectangular patches, the lower frontoparallel...
In a stereo display simulating two rectangles, the lower frontoparallel and the upper slanted around...
Stereoscopic slant perception around a vertical axis (horizontal slant) is often found to be strongl...
Perceived stereoscopic slant around a vertical axis is strongly underestimated for isolated surfaces...
Rotating a surface about a horizontal axis alters the retinal horizontal-shear disparities. Opposed ...
Consider two vertically adjacent random dot surfaces twisted 20° around the vertical axis and underg...
With few exceptions (Fantoni et al, 2008; Fulvio et al, 2009) the amodal completion of angles has be...
AbstractA compelling impression of surface slant is produced by random dot displays depicting deform...
The horizontal–vertical illusion, in which the vertical dimension is overestimated relative to the h...
AbstractGradients of absolute binocular disparity across a slanted surface are often considered the ...
AbstractThe horizontal–vertical illusion, in which the vertical dimension is overestimated relative ...
When the vertex of an occluded angle geometrically belongs to the side of the occluding surface, the...
Gradients of absolute binocular disparity across a slanted surface are often considered the basis fo...
Observers frequently underestimate the in-depth slant of rectangles under reduction conditions. This...
In images of textured three-dimensional surfaces, pattern changes can be characterized as changes in...