AbstractWe measured the ability to fuse dichoptic images of a horizontal line alone or in the presence of a textured background with different vertical disparity. Nonius-line measurements of vertical vergence were also obtained. Diplopia thresholds and vertical vergence gains were much higher in response to an isolated vertically disparate line than to one with a zero vertical-disparity background. The effect of the background was maximum when it was coplanar with the target and decreased with increasing relative horizontal disparity. We conclude that vertical disparities are integrated over a restricted range of horizontal disparities to drive vertical vergence
Vergence eye movements align the optical axes of our two eyes onto an object of interest, thus facil...
AbstractVergence eye movements were elicited in human subjects by applying disparities to square-wav...
AbstractWe investigated over what central area disparity in a random dot stereogram is integrated to...
AbstractWe measured the ability to fuse dichoptic images of a horizontal line alone or in the presen...
The vertical misalignment of corresponding features in the left and right eyes' images are known as ...
Because our eyes are set apart horizontally in our head, most disparities between the retinal images...
To compare motor and sensory capabilities for fusion of vertical disparities at different angles of ...
Generally, the vertical vergence response is smaller than the disparity that evokes it, even within ...
One useful source of depth information available to the human nervous system is present in the hori...
O'Shea and Crassini (1982, Perception & Psychophysics 32 195-196) demonstrated that fusion persists ...
AbstractHumans have two, frontally placed eyes and during reading oculomotor and sensory processes a...
AbstractDisparity-evoked vergence is studied in stereograms showing one or two depth planes which ar...
Disparity-evoked vergence is studied in stereograms showing one or two depth planes which are define...
AbstractBinocular disparities applied to large-field patterns elicit vergence eye movements at ultra...
AbstractOne function of the visual system is to combine the different views of the two eyes so that ...
Vergence eye movements align the optical axes of our two eyes onto an object of interest, thus facil...
AbstractVergence eye movements were elicited in human subjects by applying disparities to square-wav...
AbstractWe investigated over what central area disparity in a random dot stereogram is integrated to...
AbstractWe measured the ability to fuse dichoptic images of a horizontal line alone or in the presen...
The vertical misalignment of corresponding features in the left and right eyes' images are known as ...
Because our eyes are set apart horizontally in our head, most disparities between the retinal images...
To compare motor and sensory capabilities for fusion of vertical disparities at different angles of ...
Generally, the vertical vergence response is smaller than the disparity that evokes it, even within ...
One useful source of depth information available to the human nervous system is present in the hori...
O'Shea and Crassini (1982, Perception & Psychophysics 32 195-196) demonstrated that fusion persists ...
AbstractHumans have two, frontally placed eyes and during reading oculomotor and sensory processes a...
AbstractDisparity-evoked vergence is studied in stereograms showing one or two depth planes which ar...
Disparity-evoked vergence is studied in stereograms showing one or two depth planes which are define...
AbstractBinocular disparities applied to large-field patterns elicit vergence eye movements at ultra...
AbstractOne function of the visual system is to combine the different views of the two eyes so that ...
Vergence eye movements align the optical axes of our two eyes onto an object of interest, thus facil...
AbstractVergence eye movements were elicited in human subjects by applying disparities to square-wav...
AbstractWe investigated over what central area disparity in a random dot stereogram is integrated to...