AbstractWe have investigated whether our ability to discriminate the stereoscopic depth of random-dot targets set amongst random-depth distractors is facilitated when target and distractors differ in particular combinations of colour and luminance polarity. For flat-plane targets, stereo-thresholds were found to be lower with a target-distractor colour/luminance difference, but only when that difference enabled the target elements to be identified in the monocular image, either by virtue of being less numerous than the distractors, or because the subject knew beforehand the target's colour/luminance. If neither of these conditions prevailed, stereoscopic thresholds were no different when target and distractors were segregated by colour/lumi...
This research was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC).Althou...
We have measured the contrast dependence of stereoacuity using both horizontally and vertically orie...
A pioneering study by J. M. Harris and A. J. Parker (1995) found that disparity judgments using rand...
AbstractWe have investigated whether our ability to discriminate the stereoscopic depth of random-do...
AbstractWe have measured the contrast dependence of stereoacuity using both horizontally and vertica...
AbstractThe present work examines the relationship between random-dot stereograms (via the disparity...
AbstractIt is well known that chromatic information can assist in solving the stereo correspondence ...
AbstractWe have investigated the apparent collapse of stereopsis obtained with random-dot-stereogram...
Experiments are described using the random dot stereo patterns devised by Julesz, but substituting v...
Discriminating material changes from illumination changes is a key function of early vision. Luminan...
AbstractThe influence of the image segmentation cues based on colour and polarity on a motion cohere...
AbstractThe extent to which the processing of stereoscopic depth information can take place separate...
Contrast thresholds for stereoscopic depth identification (crossed or uncrossed) were measured as a ...
The visual system processes objects embedded in complex scenes that vary in both luminance and colou...
Two experiments were conducted to investigate how color and stereoscopic depth information are used ...
This research was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC).Althou...
We have measured the contrast dependence of stereoacuity using both horizontally and vertically orie...
A pioneering study by J. M. Harris and A. J. Parker (1995) found that disparity judgments using rand...
AbstractWe have investigated whether our ability to discriminate the stereoscopic depth of random-do...
AbstractWe have measured the contrast dependence of stereoacuity using both horizontally and vertica...
AbstractThe present work examines the relationship between random-dot stereograms (via the disparity...
AbstractIt is well known that chromatic information can assist in solving the stereo correspondence ...
AbstractWe have investigated the apparent collapse of stereopsis obtained with random-dot-stereogram...
Experiments are described using the random dot stereo patterns devised by Julesz, but substituting v...
Discriminating material changes from illumination changes is a key function of early vision. Luminan...
AbstractThe influence of the image segmentation cues based on colour and polarity on a motion cohere...
AbstractThe extent to which the processing of stereoscopic depth information can take place separate...
Contrast thresholds for stereoscopic depth identification (crossed or uncrossed) were measured as a ...
The visual system processes objects embedded in complex scenes that vary in both luminance and colou...
Two experiments were conducted to investigate how color and stereoscopic depth information are used ...
This research was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC).Althou...
We have measured the contrast dependence of stereoacuity using both horizontally and vertically orie...
A pioneering study by J. M. Harris and A. J. Parker (1995) found that disparity judgments using rand...