Article

Surface slant impairs disparity discontinuity discrimination

Details

Citation

Goutcher R & Wilcox LM (2021) Surface slant impairs disparity discontinuity discrimination. Vision Research, 180, pp. 37-50. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.visres.2020.12.001

Abstract
Binocular disparity signals are highly informative about the three-dimensional structure of visual scenes, including aiding the detection of depth discontinuities between surfaces. Here, we examine factors affecting sensitivity to such surface discontinuities. Participants were presented with random dot stereograms depicting two planar surfaces slanted in opposite directions and were asked to judge the sign of the depth discontinuity created where those surfaces met. Although the judgement was focussed on the adjacent edges, the precision of depth discontinuity discrimination depended upon the slant of the two surfaces: increasing surface slants to ±60° increased discontinuity discrimination thresholds by, on average, a factor of 5. Control experiments examining discontinuity discrimination across surfaces with identical slants showed either biases in discontinuity judgements or reduced threshold elevation. These results suggest that sensitivity to depth discontinuities is affected by processing limitations in both local absolute disparity measurement mechanisms and mechanisms selective for disparity differences. As further evidence in support of this conclusion, we show that our results are well-described by a model of discontinuity discrimination based on the encoding of local differences in relative disparity.

Keywords
Ophthalmology; Sensory Systems; Binocular vision; Stereoacuity; Absolute disparity; Relative disparity

Journal
Vision Research: Volume 180

StatusPublished
FundersThe Carnegie Trust
Publication date31/03/2021
Publication date online23/12/2020
Date accepted by journal01/12/2020
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/32284
PublisherElsevier BV
ISSN0042-6989

People (1)

People

Dr Ross Goutcher

Dr Ross Goutcher

Associate Professor, Psychology