Stereopsis Flashcards
How do we percieve depth perception?
Using Binocular and monocular cues.
What is the best form of depth perception?
Stereopsis which comes from both eyes working together.
If the best depth perception comes from both eyes working together does that mean people who do not have two eyes for whatever reason, cannot judge depth?
They can still judge depth to some extent using monocular cues (both still and moving), however, it will obviously not be as good as binocularly.
What are monocular cues for pictoral (in pictures ) depth perception?
Relative size - relatively things closer to you tend to be bigger (thus your fingernail held in front of your eyes will seem bigger than the tree at a distance)
Occlusion (interposition) - basically things closer to you will cover things further away (e.g. the fact that my thumb can cover the tree in the distance) thus with one eye you could determine what is closer and what is further away from you.
Relative height - things above the horizon look further away whereas things below the horizon look closer (think of the sea above the water/horizon line the sea looks far and the sand looks close).
Shadows
Atmospheric perspective - basically that due to light scattering by the atmosphere, objects that are a great distance away appear hazy
Linear perspective - so basically think about looking at a straight path into the distance, the further down the path you look the narrower the path gets until eventually it meets at a point.
Familiar size - naturally we know a human isn’t as big as the leaning tower of piza to push it.
Textural gradient -Fine details on nearby objects can be seen clearly, whereas such details are not visible on faraway objects.
What are monocular movement cues?
Motion parallax- e.g. if you are on a train the objects close to you move really fast but the objects further away move slower.
Kinetic depth effect- When still objects look like they have depth to them when you move. (Basically those art pieces where its a box sticking out and then when you walk around it and it looks like a box sticking in (not out)).
What doe oculomotor refer to?
relating to the motion of the eye.
What oculomotor cues help us determine depth and size?
- Accommodation (Monocular)
- Kinesthetic sensations from ciliary muscles are sent to the visual cortex where it is used for interpreting distance/depth
- Convergence (Binocular)
- Kinesthetic sensations from these extraocular muscles also help in depth/distance perception.
[Basically moving your muscles to focus on something either in the distance or near results in kinesthetic sensations which are sent ot the visual cortex and allow context to be added to the image you see - hence you have a working understanding of depth]
What are binocular disparity cues that allow for depth perceptions?
Eyes located at different positions on the head
Binocular vision results in two slightly different (disparate) images being projected to the retinas
The disparities are processed in the visual cortex to yield depth perception (stereopsis)
[The perception of depth and 3-dimensional structure is, possible with information visible from one eye alone however not as vivid as stereopsis]
How do you make a movie 3D?
Binocular disparities are naturally present when viewing a real 3-dimensional scene with two eyes
When viewing a 2 D scene disparities need to be simulated artificially by presenting two different images separately to each eye thus mimicking the perception of depth - for this we use the 3D glasses - which will often two different colour filters allocated to each eye - e.g. red filter infront of the left eye and a green one infront of the right eye.
What are the advanatges of binocular single vision (BSV)?
Stereopsis
Binocular Summation
Better space perception
Eye Hand Co-ordination
Better reading
Seeing Objects in camouflage
What job can you legally not do without stereopsis?
Be a pilot - regulations state you must have all three of worth’s grades.
What is depth perception and what does it depend on?
What is the observed limits of stereopsis?
Smallest depth difference we can detect
Greater the disparity the greater the depth effect
Observed limits of Stereopsis:
◦Best observers as good as 2 sec of arc
◦On average 10 seconds of arc
What factors affect your stereo (stereopsis) thresholds?
Practice effects
Luminance - lighting levels
Exposure duration
Retinal eccentricity
Crowding effects
Motion in depth
Monocular blur is more detrimental to stereo acuity than binocular blur - i.e. if you don’t correct anisometropia the px has bad stereopsis.
Are you born with stereopsis?
No - It is:
Initially absent
Develops between 3-4 months
Reaches normal levels at 6 months (Visual Evoked Potentials)
Research carried out using real stereo-tests shows stereopsis:
Varies with age
Is highly dependent on the test (making sure you have eliminated factors that affect it (a.k.a the factors that limit stereo thresholds).
Children achieve 40 seconds of arc (Titmus) > 9years old
Majority of adults achieve 60 seconds of arc (TNO) < 70years old
What is the refrence/gold standard test for stereopsis?
Psycho-physics Tests - but these take hours ( around 2) to complete.