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Perceptual grouping via binocular disparity: The impact of stereoscopic good continuation
Author(s) -
Lesley Deas,
Laurie M. Wilcox
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of vision
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.126
H-Index - 113
ISSN - 1534-7362
DOI - 10.1167/15.11.11
Subject(s) - continuation , stereoscopy , gestalt psychology , depth perception , artificial intelligence , binocular disparity , computer vision , stereopsis , computer science , perception , dimension (graph theory) , mathematics , pattern recognition (psychology) , psychology , neuroscience , pure mathematics , programming language
Stereoscopic contextual effects are widely reported but are generally discussed in terms of 2-D Gestalt grouping principles, e.g., good continuation or closure. We propose that there are disparity-based grouping operations that are separable from 2-D grouping and instead depend on the distribution of binocular disparity information. Two experiments assess the impact of perceptual grouping via good disparity continuation. First, perceived depth magnitude is reduced for a multidot contour with a smooth disparity gradient compared to the end points in isolation. This reduction is eliminated when disparity jitter is introduced to the intermediate dots. Second, observers showed more efficient visual search for the continuous contour versus the discontinuous version. Therefore, when there is spatial support for interpretation of a slanted object, quantitative depth is reduced, but is rapidly detected in visual search. These results reflect the operation of disparity-based grouping, extending the 2-D principle of good continuation into the third dimension.

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