Facilitation of stereoscopic depth perception by a relative-size cue in ambiguous disparity stereograms.
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Fineman, Mark B. (Author)
Title
Facilitation of stereoscopic depth perception by a relative-size cue in ambiguous disparity stereograms.
Abstract
Proposed that the cue of relative size may facilitate depth perception in accordance with a crossed or uncrossed disparity in stereograms in which both tendencies are equally represented. A concurrent concept was that the latency associated with the perception of depth in random-dot stereograms may be due, in part, to a cue conflict between binocular disparity and relative size. 4 male and 2 female graduate students were given 8 presentations of 5 stereographic stimuli, in which disparity was ambiguous but relative size was systematically altered. Ss were tested for direction of depth preferences and response latency. Both the relative-size effects and an uncrossed disparity bias were evidenced in the data. The latter effect was attributed to binocular rivalry between dissimilar elements in the stereoscopic half-fields. It is concluded that depth cue relationships are more complex than had been suggested by simple dominance theories. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved). © 1971 American Psychological Association.
Publication
Journal of Experimental Psychology
Date
1971-01-01, January 1971
Volume
90
Issue
2
Pages
215-221
DOI
Citation Key
ISSN
00221015 (ISSN)
Language
English
Extra
2 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
tex.ids: pop00125
tex.type: Journal article
Citation
Fineman, M. B. (1971). Facilitation of stereoscopic depth perception by a relative-size cue in ambiguous disparity stereograms. Journal of Experimental Psychology, 90(2), 215–221. https://doi.org/10.1037/h0031547
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