The influence of large scanning eye movements on stereoscopic slant estimation of large surfaces

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Abstract

The results of several experiments demonstrate that the estimated magnitude of perceived slant of large stereoscopic surfaces increases with the duration of the presentation. In these experiments, subjects were free to make eye movements. A possible explanation for the increase is that the visual system needs to scan the stimulus with eye movements (which take time) before it can make a reliable estimate of slant. We investigated the influence of large scanning eye movements on stereoscopic slant estimation of large surfaces. Six subjects estimated the magnitude of slant about the vertical or horizontal axis induced by large-field stereograms of which one half-image was transformed by horizontal-scale, horizontal shear, vertical scale, vertical shear, divergence or rotation relative to the other half- image. The experiment was blocked in three sessions. Each session was devoted to one of the following fixation strategies: central fixation, peripheral (20 deg) fixation and active scanning of the stimulus. The presentation duration in each of the sessions was 0.5, 2 or 8 s. Estimations were done with and without a visual reference. The magnitudes of estimated slant and the perceptual biases were not significantly influenced by the three fixation strategies. Thus, our results provide no support for the hypothesis that the time used for the execution of large scanning eye movements explains the build-up of estimated slant with the duration of the stimulus presentation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)467-479
Number of pages13
JournalVision Research
Volume39
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2000

Funding

The authors were supported by the Foundation for Life Sciences (SLW) of the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO). RVE was also supported by a Talent Stipendium (NWO#810-404-006/1) and by a grant from the Human Frontier of Science # RG-34/96. Jim Enright made very thoughtful and insightful comments which improved several formulations in this paper. We thank Ben Backus, Marty Banks, Eli Brenner, Mark Edwards, Cliff Schor, and the two referees for valuable discussion. We are grateful to May Wong for administrative assistance and to Pieter Schiphorst for technical assistance.

Keywords

  • Binocular disparity
  • Binocular vision
  • Eye movements
  • Sequential stereopsis
  • Slant estimation

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