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The perceived depth from disparity as function of luminance contrast
Author(s) -
PeiYin Chen,
ChienChung Chen,
Christopher W. Tyler
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of vision
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.126
H-Index - 113
ISSN - 1534-7362
DOI - 10.1167/16.11.20
Subject(s) - luminance , contrast (vision) , binocular disparity , depth perception , perception , stereoscopy , stereopsis , binocular vision , optics , psychology , artificial intelligence , mathematics , computer vision , computer science , physics , neuroscience
Does human vision show the contrast invariance expected of an ideal stereoscopic system for computing depth from disparity? We used random-dot stereograms to investigate the luminance contrast effect on perceived depth from disparity. The perceived depth of disparity corrugations was measured by adjusting the length of a horizontal line to match the perceived depth of the corrugations at various luminance contrasts. At each contrast, the perceived depth increased with disparity up to a critical value, decreasing with further increases in disparity. Both the maximum perceived depth and the disparity modulation level where this maximum occurred changed as a sigmoid function of luminance contrast. These results show that perceived depth from disparity depends in a complex manner on the luminance contrast in the image, providing significant limitations on depth perception at low contrasts in a lawful manner but that are incompatible with existing models of cortical disparity processing.

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