Note to users. If you're seeing this message, it means that your browser cannot find this page's style/presentation instructions -- or possibly that you are using a browser that does not support current Web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing, and what you can do to make your experience of our site the best it can be.


Science 24 July 1964:
Vol. 145. no. 3630, pp. 356 - 362
DOI: 10.1126/science.145.3630.356

Articles

Binocular Depth Perception without Familiarity Cues

Random-dot stereo images with controlled spatial and temporal properties clarify problems in stereopsis

Bela Julesz 1

1 The Technical staff in the Human Information Processing Department, Bell Telephone Laboratories, Murray Hill, N.J.

The reported phenomena were obtained through the use of special techniques. (i) All monocular depth and familiarity cues were removed from the stimuli (through the use of randomdot stereo patterns). (ii) The statistical and topological properties of the stimuli were precisely known (since they were generated according to a specific computer program). (iii) Convergence motions of the eye and proprioceptive cues were eliminated (through the use of tachistoscopic illumination). (iv) The time of presentation was under control (through erasure of the persistent afterimages). Under these conditions stereopsis could be studied in its purest form. It was shown that depth can be perceived in the absence of monocular depth and familiarity cues and of all binocular depth cues except for disparity. These findings have important implications for some existing theories of stereopsis and open up areas for further research. Some phenomena based on stereo erasure are reported here for the first time. It has been demonstrated that the perception of ambiguous depth organizations can be influenced, even subliminally, by a preceding unambiguous stimulus. Perhaps the most interesting result is the finding that the correspondence of objects and patterns in the two retinal projections can be established without actual recognition of the objects and patterns. This pattern matching is based on some relatively simple processes of finding connected clusters formed by adjacent points of similar brightness, and the processes seem to be amenable to rigorous analysis.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Aging and the perception of slant from optical texture, motion parallax, and binocular disparity.
J. F. Norman, C. E. Crabtree, A. N. Bartholomew, and E. L. Ferrell (2009)
Atten Percept Psychophys 71, 116-130
   Abstract »    PDF »
Variation in Stereoacuity: Normative Description, Fixation Disparity, and the Roles of Aging and Gender.
C. M. Zaroff, M. Knutelska, and T. E. Frumkes (2003)
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 44, 891-900
   Abstract »    Full Text »    PDF »
Quantitative Analysis of the Responses of V1 Neurons to Horizontal Disparity in Dynamic Random-Dot Stereograms.
S.J.D. Prince, A. D. Pointon, B. G. Cumming, and A. J. Parker (2002)
J Neurophysiol 87, 191-208
   Abstract »    Full Text »    PDF »
Component Perimetry: A Fast Method to Detect Visual Field Defects Caused by Brain Lesions.
G. Bachmann and M. Fahle (2000)
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 41, 2870-2886
   Abstract »    Full Text »
The measurement of perceptual impairment.
B. Wilson (1987)
Clinical Rehabilitation 1, 169-173
   PDF »
Optokinetic eye movements in albino rabbits: inversion in anterior visual field.
H Collewijn, B. Winterson, and M. Dubois (1978)
Science 199, 1351-1353
   Abstract »    PDF »
Stereoscopic Depth Aftereffect Produced without Monocular Cues.
C. Blakemore and B. Julesz (1971)
Science 171, 286-288
   Abstract »    PDF »
Picture Processing by Computer.
L. D. Harmon and K. C. Knowlton (1969)
Science 164, 19-29
   PDF »
Stereopsis Based on Vernier Acuity Cues Alone.
B. Julesz and G. J. Spivack (1967)
Science 157, 563-565
   Abstract »    PDF »
Binocular Disappearance of Monocular Symmetry.
B. Julesz (1966)
Science 153, 657-658
   Abstract »    PDF »
Visual Contours in Homogeneous Space.
T. Shipley (1965)
Science 150, 348-350
   Abstract »    PDF »



To Advertise     Find Products


Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)