L8 - Depth Perception Flashcards

1
Q

Why are our eyes both facing the same direction?

A
  • Most animals have two eyes - means you cannot sneak up on an emu behind as their eyes are on the side
  • Front facing eyes have almost identical views of the world: thumb and closed eye and the movement or the pointing
  • Both eyes have slightly different images
  • Therefore different objects with different depths for both eyes, must be more important than seeing everywhere
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2
Q

What is Stereopsis?

A
  • Our eyes have two diff views of the world to get depth
  • Any object not on the horopter (locus of points in space that have the same disparity as fixation) has a retinal disparity (the distance between two objects far and close)
  • Object both eyes are looking at have same RD, something further will have retinal dis, called cross-RD, things that are closer will have RD and indicated as sign
  • Once calculated, we know how far the object is away from our horopter
  • Objects at diff distances will create diff amounts of disparity = If you can cause disparity = depth
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3
Q

What are ways of getting different images into each eye?

A
  • Red-green anaglyphs
  • Polaroid over each eye - lights oscillates in different directions with filters = old cinema glasses
  • Mirrors
  • Free fuse: get one eye to look on the other side
  • Autostereograms
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4
Q

What does disparity govern?

A
  • The polarity of disparity governs whether seen as in front or behind horopter (screen)
  • Amount of disparity governs the amount of depth seen
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5
Q

What are Random dot stereograms?

A
  • Patterns of random dots is copied with some of the dots shifted
  • Each pattern presented to diff eye
  • Each eye alone sees nothing but random dots
  • Together the eyes extract the retinal disparity and see the form
  • Depth must precede form
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6
Q

What was the use of visual search?

A
  • Target defined by depth pops out
  • Info needed to pick up a target with fingers: stereovision important in action
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7
Q

How do these pictures look different if it is the same picture (Autostereograms)?

A
  • Stripes
  • Both eyes look at stripe, look at same image = looks flat
  • Look at different stripes with different eye = depth
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8
Q

What is the neural basis of disparity sensitivity?

A
  • Cells cannot be driven by both eyes at the level of the retina
  • Left and right eyes drive different layers of LGN - so still no binocular cells
  • First place info from two eyes come together is area V1
  • Many cells here are disparity sensitive
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9
Q

What is stereoblindness?

A
  • Many people have problems with their stereovision (10%)
  • If there are any problems in early life then the brain does not learn to put the info together/eyes do not work together and this cue to depth is lost
  • Such problems sometimes don’t know that they have this problem - must be other cues to depth
  • Have a lack of finesse for depth perception but still reasonably good perception
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10
Q

What is motion parallax?

A
  • Movement through the world or our eyes causes the image on our retina to move
  • Things closer to us move faster and things further away move slower so if we have dots and move them at different speeds they can look like they have depth
  • Subjects see a static 3D surface when looking at a moving 2D surface because they moved their heads
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11
Q

What are pictorial cues to depth?

A
  • Lack of stereo cues and lack of motion = we can still see depth using the following:
  • Interposition
  • Height
  • Size
  • Perspective
  • Shadows
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12
Q

Describe size?

A

For a given object, it will cast a smaller and smaller retinal image as it gets further away

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13
Q

Describe texture gradients?

A

Can make it seem like pictures and shapes are angled to another side even though the spatial cues are changed purposely

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14
Q

Shade and shading?

A
  • Some buttons stick out and some stick in because brain assumes that light comes from the top
  • If you turned picture upside down = reverse
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15
Q

Cast shadows?

A

Shadow of object gives us cue of depth and can be very powerful

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16
Q

What is depth used for?

A

Our understanding of depth is used to then decide on how large/small things are and their spatial relationships

17
Q

What is emmert’s law?

A
  • Images of same retinal size will appear different sizes when located at different distances (linear relationship)
  • Depth informs eyes
  • Retinal image does not change but size does change
18
Q

What are distortions due to misplaced depth?

A
  • Hollow face illusion
  • Ponzo illusions
  • Muller-lyer
  • Ames room
19
Q

What is Ames room illusion?

A
  • People appear distorted in this room
  • Little person is further away = smaller retinal image = the cues trick you into thinking they are the same distance