Types of shear disparity and the perception of surface inclination |
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Authors: | IP Howard BJ Pierce |
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Affiliation: | Yale University School of Medicine, Department of Cell Biology, New Haven, CT 06520-8002, USA. dlewin@biomed.med.yale.edu |
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Abstract: | A study is reported of (i) the perceived inclination of a textured surface in depth about a horizontal axis as a function of disparity magnitude for horizontal-shear disparity, vertical-shear disparity, and rotation disparity; and (ii) interactions between patterns with shear or rotation disparity and superimposed or adjacent patterns or lines with zero disparity. Horizontal-shear disparity produced strong inclination which was enhanced by superimposed or adjacent zero-disparity stimuli. It produced little or no inclination contrast in superimposed or adjacent zero-disparity stimuli. Vertical-shear disparity produced inclination in the opposite direction (induced effect) which was reduced to near zero by a superimposed zero-disparity pattern. Adjacent vertical-shear and zero-disparity patterns appeared inclined at slightly different angles with a wide curved boundary. This suggests that vertical-shear disparities are averaged over a wide area. Rotation disparity produced minimal inclination. A superimposed or adjacent zero-disparity line appeared strongly inclined. A superimposed or adjacent zero-disparity pattern appeared vertical and caused the pattern with rotation disparity to appear inclined. Four mechanisms are proposed to account for the results: depth contrast, depth enhancement, deformation-disparity processing, and disparity transfer arising from cyclovergence. |
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