3D Space Perception. (aka Depth Perception)

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "3D Space Perception. (aka Depth Perception)"

Transcription

1 3D Space Perception (aka Depth Perception)

2 3D Space Perception The flat retinal image problem: How do we reconstruct 3D-space from 2D image? What information is available to support this process? Interaction between Perceived Size and Perceived Distance (both depend upon scaling )

3 Size Constancy Perceived size is not slavishly linked to retinal size; otherwise your car would appear to be smaller when observed at increasing distances. Instead, perceived size tends to remain invariant across observation distance a phenomenon known as size constancy. Perceived size depends upon the psychological scaling of retinal size relative to perceived distance. Hence, size, distance and 3D visual perception are all based upon a more complex process known as spatial scaling. Corollary: Perceived Speed = retinal velocity x scaled distance

4 Failures of Size Constancy The Moon Illusion

5 Failures of Size Constancy The Buechet Chair Click here for more

6 Failures of Size Constancy The Ames Room (Iowa State University at Ames, IA)

7 3D-Depth Information Cues

8 Oculomotor Information State of Accommodation State of Vergence

9 Accommodation In theory, the efferent signal driving the ciliary muscles (and/or afferent feedback from stretch sensors in the ciliary muscles) could be used by higher-order visual processes to help scale 3D space and/or visual distance. There is little evidence to support this hypothetical role of accommodation.

10 Vergence Eye Movements Support for the role of efferent/afferent 3D information from vergence eye movements comes from: Tower Speed Illusion and Botox Treatment of Rectus Muscles in Strabismus Surgery

11 Static Monocular Sources of 3D Information Occlusion Familiar Size (Relative Size) Texture Gradients Linear Perspective Aerial Perspective (Atmospheric extinction) Shadow Casting

12 Occlusion Near objects block visual access to far objects

13 Linear Perspective Parallel lines on the visual plane converge toward the vanishing point with increasing observation distance This law of projective geometry provides a strong cue about distance and 3D space.

14 Linear Perspective

15 Linear Perspective in the Service of Art

16 Familiar Size/Relative Size Objects of the same physical size project different size retinal images depending upon the observation distance. This knowledge and prior experience contribute to 3D space perception. What is the height of this sculpture in feet?

17 Familiar Size Cue Novel objects can be psychologically scaled given visual references of known size. For example Easter Island Sculpture without Familiar Size Cue Easter Island Sculpture with Familiar Size Cue

18 An extended surface with uniform spatial texture will project a retinal image with a non-uniform texture gradient that increases in spatial frequency as observation distance increases. Texture Gradients

19 Aerial Perspective Particulate matter in the atmosphere scatters light; reducing contrast and intensity of the retinal image. The light from distant objects must pass through more atmosphere than the light from near objects.

20 Shadow Casting Just as occlusion of objects serves as a powerful cue for depth occlusion of the illuminant (sun) forms shadows which provide a powerful source of information for extracting 3D representations from a 2D retinal image.

21 Identify the Monocular Depth Cues A Rainy Day in Paris Gustav Caillebotte ( )

22 Identify the Monocular Depth Cues A Rainy Day in Paris Gustav Caillebotte ( ) Linear Perspective Occlusion Texture Gradient Aerial Perspective Shadow Casting Familiar Size

23 Dynamic Monocular Sources of 3D Information Motion Parallax Relative Angular Velocity Radial Expansion/Looming Moving Shadows

24 Motion Parallax Motion parallax occurs when an observer fixates a point at intermediate distance and then rotates their head. Objects in the distance appear to move WITH head motion; while objects closer than the fixation plane appear to move AGAINST the rotation of the head. Motion Parallax and Dynamic Shadow Casting Demo

25 Optic Flow: Radial Expansion Optic Flow and Driving Demo

26 Delta Angular Velocity/Angular Size Lecture Note: Need for improved Slow Moving Vehicle sign/

27 Binocular Depth Perception

28 Advantages of Binocularity Redundancy (survival value) Stereopsis (Predators) Large Field-of-View (Prey) Binocular summation improves sensitivity by 2 (signal:noise ratio sampling theory) Binocular acuity better than monocular; Same for CSF and many other functions

29 Binocular Vision (cont.) Binocular rivalry (Role of the dominant eye) Autokinesis phenomenon

30 Stereopsis Ability to use binocular retinal disparity information to extract relative depth information from the retinal image pairs Retinal mismatch can be used to reconstruct much of the missing 3 rd dimension from the flat retinal images

31 Retinal Disparity Understanding begins with a consideration of the geometry of the horopter

32 Horopter (Corresponding Retinal Images) The HOROPTER is an imaginary surface whose points are all at the same distance as the fixation point. Points on the horopter project to corresponding locations on the temporal and nasal retinas, respectively. These corresponding locations exhibit zero retinal disparity i.e., D = d temporal d nasal = 0

33 Crossed and Uncrossed Retinal Disparity The corresponding locations for the closer green stimulus exhibits positive retinal disparity D = d temporal d nasal > 0 (or crossed disparity) The corresponding locations for the farther red stimulus exhibits negative retinal disparity D = d temporal d nasal < 0 (or uncrossed disparity)

34 Depth Recovery by Binocular Cortical Cells

35 Panum s Fusion Area

36 Nativists v. Empiricists Debate Nativist position The CNS is capable of processing many environmental invariants at birth giving rise to direct perception (e.g., James Gibson) Empiricist position Sensory information is too impoverished to explain perceptual experience without recourse to knowledge about the world; it is based upon unconscious inference (e.g., Bishop Berkeley)

37 Support for Nativism Eleanor Gibson s Visual Cliff Experiment (and HRD replication studies) Bela Julesz s Random Dot Stereogram paradigm

38 Random Dot Stereograms Can retinal disparity yield perception of depth independent of knowledge about the nature of the world? Nativist vs. Empiricist Debate Bela Julesz

39 Red-Blue Anaglyph Technique (black background) Anaglyph glasses transmit RED and MAGENTA dots to the left eye; and, the BLUE and MAGENTA dots to the right eye. Demo stimulus from USD s PSYC 301 Lab

Vision: Distance & Size Perception

Vision: Distance & Size Perception Vision: Distance & Size Perception Useful terms: Egocentric distance: distance from you to an object. Relative distance: distance between two objects in the environment. 3-d structure: Objects appear three-dimensional,

More information

Unit IV: Sensation & Perception. Module 19 Vision Organization & Interpretation

Unit IV: Sensation & Perception. Module 19 Vision Organization & Interpretation Unit IV: Sensation & Perception Module 19 Vision Organization & Interpretation Visual Organization 19-1 Perceptual Organization 19-1 How do we form meaningful perceptions from sensory information? A group

More information

Lecture 14. Jonathan Pillow Sensation & Perception (PSY 345 / NEU 325) Fall 2017

Lecture 14. Jonathan Pillow Sensation & Perception (PSY 345 / NEU 325) Fall 2017 Motion Perception Chapter 8 Lecture 14 Jonathan Pillow Sensation & Perception (PSY 345 / NEU 325) Fall 2017 1 (chap 6 leftovers) Defects in Stereopsis Strabismus eyes not aligned, so diff images fall on

More information

IV: Visual Organization and Interpretation

IV: Visual Organization and Interpretation IV: Visual Organization and Interpretation Describe Gestalt psychologists understanding of perceptual organization, and explain how figure-ground and grouping principles contribute to our perceptions Explain

More information

the dimensionality of the world Travelling through Space and Time Learning Outcomes Johannes M. Zanker

the dimensionality of the world Travelling through Space and Time Learning Outcomes Johannes M. Zanker Travelling through Space and Time Johannes M. Zanker http://www.pc.rhul.ac.uk/staff/j.zanker/ps1061/l4/ps1061_4.htm 05/02/2015 PS1061 Sensation & Perception #4 JMZ 1 Learning Outcomes at the end of this

More information

P rcep e t p i t on n a s a s u n u c n ons n c s ious u s i nf n e f renc n e L ctur u e 4 : Recogni n t i io i n

P rcep e t p i t on n a s a s u n u c n ons n c s ious u s i nf n e f renc n e L ctur u e 4 : Recogni n t i io i n Lecture 4: Recognition and Identification Dr. Tony Lambert Reading: UoA text, Chapter 5, Sensation and Perception (especially pp. 141-151) 151) Perception as unconscious inference Hermann von Helmholtz

More information

Limitations of the Medium, compensation or accentuation

Limitations of the Medium, compensation or accentuation The Art and Science of Depiction Limitations of the Medium, compensation or accentuation Fredo Durand MIT- Lab for Computer Science Plan of the next sessions The picture is flat The viewpoint is unique

More information

Limitations of the Medium, compensation or accentuation

Limitations of the Medium, compensation or accentuation The Art and Science of Depiction Limitations of the Medium, compensation or accentuation Fredo Durand MIT- Lab for Computer Science Plan of the next sessions The picture is flat The viewpoint is unique

More information

Beau Lotto: Optical Illusions Show How We See

Beau Lotto: Optical Illusions Show How We See Beau Lotto: Optical Illusions Show How We See What is the background of the presenter, what do they do? How does this talk relate to psychology? What topics does it address? Be specific. Describe in great

More information

Perception. What We Will Cover in This Section. Perception. How we interpret the information our senses receive. Overview Perception

Perception. What We Will Cover in This Section. Perception. How we interpret the information our senses receive. Overview Perception Perception 10/3/2002 Perception.ppt 1 What We Will Cover in This Section Overview Perception Visual perception. Organizing principles. 10/3/2002 Perception.ppt 2 Perception How we interpret the information

More information

Perception. The process of organizing and interpreting information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events.

Perception. The process of organizing and interpreting information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events. Perception The process of organizing and interpreting information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events. At any moment our awareness focuses, like a flashlight beam, on only

More information

Regan Mandryk. Depth and Space Perception

Regan Mandryk. Depth and Space Perception Depth and Space Perception Regan Mandryk Disclaimer Many of these slides include animated gifs or movies that may not be viewed on your computer system. They should run on the latest downloads of Quick

More information

Color Deficiency ( Color Blindness )

Color Deficiency ( Color Blindness ) Color Deficiency ( Color Blindness ) Monochromat - person who needs only one wavelength to match any color Dichromat - person who needs only two wavelengths to match any color Anomalous trichromat - needs

More information

Perception: From Biology to Psychology

Perception: From Biology to Psychology Perception: From Biology to Psychology What do you see? Perception is a process of meaning-making because we attach meanings to sensations. That is exactly what happened in perceiving the Dalmatian Patterns

More information

Virtual Reality Technology and Convergence. NBAY 6120 March 20, 2018 Donald P. Greenberg Lecture 7

Virtual Reality Technology and Convergence. NBAY 6120 March 20, 2018 Donald P. Greenberg Lecture 7 Virtual Reality Technology and Convergence NBAY 6120 March 20, 2018 Donald P. Greenberg Lecture 7 Virtual Reality A term used to describe a digitally-generated environment which can simulate the perception

More information

Today. Pattern Recognition. Introduction. Perceptual processing. Feature Integration Theory, cont d. Feature Integration Theory (FIT)

Today. Pattern Recognition. Introduction. Perceptual processing. Feature Integration Theory, cont d. Feature Integration Theory (FIT) Today Pattern Recognition Intro Psychology Georgia Tech Instructor: Dr. Bruce Walker Turning features into things Patterns Constancy Depth Illusions Introduction We have focused on the detection of features

More information

Virtual Reality Technology and Convergence. NBA 6120 February 14, 2018 Donald P. Greenberg Lecture 7

Virtual Reality Technology and Convergence. NBA 6120 February 14, 2018 Donald P. Greenberg Lecture 7 Virtual Reality Technology and Convergence NBA 6120 February 14, 2018 Donald P. Greenberg Lecture 7 Virtual Reality A term used to describe a digitally-generated environment which can simulate the perception

More information

The Ecological View of Perception. Lecture 14

The Ecological View of Perception. Lecture 14 The Ecological View of Perception Lecture 14 1 Ecological View of Perception James J. Gibson (1950, 1966, 1979) Eleanor J. Gibson (1967) Stimulus provides information Perception involves extracting this

More information

Virtual Reality. NBAY 6120 April 4, 2016 Donald P. Greenberg Lecture 9

Virtual Reality. NBAY 6120 April 4, 2016 Donald P. Greenberg Lecture 9 Virtual Reality NBAY 6120 April 4, 2016 Donald P. Greenberg Lecture 9 Virtual Reality A term used to describe a digitally-generated environment which can simulate the perception of PRESENCE. Note that

More information

An Introduction to 3D Computer Graphics, Stereoscopic Image, and Animation in OpenGL and C/C++ Fore June

An Introduction to 3D Computer Graphics, Stereoscopic Image, and Animation in OpenGL and C/C++ Fore June An Introduction to 3D Computer Graphics, Stereoscopic Image, and Animation in OpenGL and C/C++ Fore June Chapter 8 Depth Perception 8.1 Stereoscopic Depth Perception When we observe the three dimensional

More information

Module 2. Lecture-1. Understanding basic principles of perception including depth and its representation.

Module 2. Lecture-1. Understanding basic principles of perception including depth and its representation. Module 2 Lecture-1 Understanding basic principles of perception including depth and its representation. Initially let us take the reference of Gestalt law in order to have an understanding of the basic

More information

Visual Effects of Light. Prof. Grega Bizjak, PhD Laboratory of Lighting and Photometry Faculty of Electrical Engineering University of Ljubljana

Visual Effects of Light. Prof. Grega Bizjak, PhD Laboratory of Lighting and Photometry Faculty of Electrical Engineering University of Ljubljana Visual Effects of Light Prof. Grega Bizjak, PhD Laboratory of Lighting and Photometry Faculty of Electrical Engineering University of Ljubljana Light is life If sun would turn off the life on earth would

More information

Thinking About Psychology: The Science of Mind and Behavior 2e. Charles T. Blair-Broeker Randal M. Ernst

Thinking About Psychology: The Science of Mind and Behavior 2e. Charles T. Blair-Broeker Randal M. Ernst Thinking About Psychology: The Science of Mind and Behavior 2e Charles T. Blair-Broeker Randal M. Ernst Sensation and Perception Chapter Module 9 Perception Perception While sensation is the process by

More information

Perceived depth is enhanced with parallax scanning

Perceived depth is enhanced with parallax scanning Perceived Depth is Enhanced with Parallax Scanning March 1, 1999 Dennis Proffitt & Tom Banton Department of Psychology University of Virginia Perceived depth is enhanced with parallax scanning Background

More information

Virtual Reality. Lecture #11 NBA 6120 Donald P. Greenberg September 30, 2015

Virtual Reality. Lecture #11 NBA 6120 Donald P. Greenberg September 30, 2015 Virtual Reality Lecture #11 NBA 6120 Donald P. Greenberg September 30, 2015 Virtual Reality What is Virtual Reality? Virtual Reality A term used to describe a computer generated environment which can simulate

More information

Gestalt Principles of Visual Perception

Gestalt Principles of Visual Perception Gestalt Principles of Visual Perception Fritz Perls Father of Gestalt theory and Gestalt Therapy Movement in experimental psychology which began prior to WWI. We perceive objects as well-organized patterns

More information

Visual Effects of. Light. Warmth. Light is life. Sun as a deity (god) If sun would turn off the life on earth would extinct

Visual Effects of. Light. Warmth. Light is life. Sun as a deity (god) If sun would turn off the life on earth would extinct Visual Effects of Light Prof. Grega Bizjak, PhD Laboratory of Lighting and Photometry Faculty of Electrical Engineering University of Ljubljana Light is life If sun would turn off the life on earth would

More information

Simple Figures and Perceptions in Depth (2): Stereo Capture

Simple Figures and Perceptions in Depth (2): Stereo Capture 59 JSL, Volume 2 (2006), 59 69 Simple Figures and Perceptions in Depth (2): Stereo Capture Kazuo OHYA Following previous paper the purpose of this paper is to collect and publish some useful simple stimuli

More information

Vision. Definition. Sensing of objects by the light reflected off the objects into our eyes

Vision. Definition. Sensing of objects by the light reflected off the objects into our eyes Vision Vision Definition Sensing of objects by the light reflected off the objects into our eyes Only occurs when there is the interaction of the eyes and the brain (Perception) What is light? Visible

More information

Outline 2/21/2013. The Retina

Outline 2/21/2013. The Retina Outline 2/21/2013 PSYC 120 General Psychology Spring 2013 Lecture 9: Sensation and Perception 2 Dr. Bart Moore bamoore@napavalley.edu Office hours Tuesdays 11:00-1:00 How we sense and perceive the world

More information

Perceptual Organization

Perceptual Organization PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition, in Modules) David Myers PowerPoint Slides Aneeq Ahmad Henderson State University Worth Publishers, 2007 1 Perceptual Organization Module 16 2 Perceptual Organization Perceptual

More information

Sensation. Perception. Perception

Sensation. Perception. Perception Ch 4D depth and gestalt 1 Sensation Basic principles in perception o Absolute Threshold o Difference Threshold o Weber s Law o Sensory Adaptation Description Examples Color Perception o Trichromatic Theory

More information

Learning Targets. Module 19

Learning Targets. Module 19 Learning Targets Module 19 Visual Organization and Interpretation 19-1 Describe the Gestalt psychologists understanding of perceptual organization, and explain how figure-ground and grouping principles

More information

Perceptual Organization. Unit 3 RG 4e

Perceptual Organization. Unit 3 RG 4e Perceptual Organization Unit 3 RG 4e Modified PowerPoint from: Aneeq Ahmad -- Henderson State University. Worth Publishers 2007 Perceptual Illusions To understand how perception is organized, illusions

More information

Perception. The process of organizing and interpreting information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events.

Perception. The process of organizing and interpreting information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events. Perception The process of organizing and interpreting information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events. Perceptual Ideas Perception Selective Attention: focus of conscious

More information

Sensation and Perception

Sensation and Perception Page 94 Check syllabus! We are starting with Section 6-7 in book. Sensation and Perception Our Link With the World Shorter wavelengths give us blue experience Longer wavelengths give us red experience

More information

PERCEIVING MOVEMENT. Ways to create movement

PERCEIVING MOVEMENT. Ways to create movement PERCEIVING MOVEMENT Ways to create movement Perception More than one ways to create the sense of movement Real movement is only one of them Slide 2 Important for survival Animals become still when they

More information

Lecture 8. Human Information Processing (1) CENG 412-Human Factors in Engineering May

Lecture 8. Human Information Processing (1) CENG 412-Human Factors in Engineering May Lecture 8. Human Information Processing (1) CENG 412-Human Factors in Engineering May 30 2009 1 Outline Visual Sensory systems Reading Wickens pp. 61-91 2 Today s story: Textbook page 61. List the vision-related

More information

Prof. Riyadh Al_Azzawi F.R.C.Psych

Prof. Riyadh Al_Azzawi F.R.C.Psych Prof. Riyadh Al_Azzawi F.R.C.Psych Perception: is the study of how we integrate sensory information into percepts of objects and how we then use these percepts to get around in the world (a percept is

More information

Sensation. Our sensory and perceptual processes work together to help us sort out complext processes

Sensation. Our sensory and perceptual processes work together to help us sort out complext processes Sensation Our sensory and perceptual processes work together to help us sort out complext processes Sensation Bottom-Up Processing analysis that begins with the sense receptors and works up to the brain

More information

Perception of 3D Structure. How does the visual system reconstruct a 3D world from the FLAT, 2D retinal image? Our depth perception: far from flawless

Perception of 3D Structure. How does the visual system reconstruct a 3D world from the FLAT, 2D retinal image? Our depth perception: far from flawless Perception of 3D Structure Depth perception is crucially important for everyday activities Getting out of bed in the morning Reaching for nearby objects (such as the alarm clock) Pouring coffee into your

More information

THE RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF PICTORIAL AND NONPICTORIAL DISTANCE CUES FOR DRIVER VISION. Michael J. Flannagan Michael Sivak Julie K.

THE RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF PICTORIAL AND NONPICTORIAL DISTANCE CUES FOR DRIVER VISION. Michael J. Flannagan Michael Sivak Julie K. THE RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF PICTORIAL AND NONPICTORIAL DISTANCE CUES FOR DRIVER VISION Michael J. Flannagan Michael Sivak Julie K. Simpson The University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute Ann

More information

The Human Visual System!

The Human Visual System! an engineering-focused introduction to! The Human Visual System! EE367/CS448I: Computational Imaging and Display! stanford.edu/class/ee367! Lecture 2! Gordon Wetzstein! Stanford University! nautilus eye,

More information

Virtual Reality I. Visual Imaging in the Electronic Age. Donald P. Greenberg November 9, 2017 Lecture #21

Virtual Reality I. Visual Imaging in the Electronic Age. Donald P. Greenberg November 9, 2017 Lecture #21 Virtual Reality I Visual Imaging in the Electronic Age Donald P. Greenberg November 9, 2017 Lecture #21 1968: Ivan Sutherland 1990s: HMDs, Henry Fuchs 2013: Google Glass History of Virtual Reality 2016:

More information

the human chapter 1 Traffic lights the human User-centred Design Light Vision part 1 (modified extract for AISD 2005) Information i/o

the human chapter 1 Traffic lights the human User-centred Design Light Vision part 1 (modified extract for AISD 2005) Information i/o Traffic lights chapter 1 the human part 1 (modified extract for AISD 2005) http://www.baddesigns.com/manylts.html User-centred Design Bad design contradicts facts pertaining to human capabilities Usability

More information

Chapter 5: Color vision remnants Chapter 6: Depth perception

Chapter 5: Color vision remnants Chapter 6: Depth perception Chapter 5: Color vision remnants Chapter 6: Depth perception Lec 12 Jonathan Pillow, Sensation & Perception (PSY 345 / NEU 325) Princeton University, Fall 2017 1 Other types of color-blindness: Monochromat:

More information

Human Vision. Human Vision - Perception

Human Vision. Human Vision - Perception 1 Human Vision SPATIAL ORIENTATION IN FLIGHT 2 Limitations of the Senses Visual Sense Nonvisual Senses SPATIAL ORIENTATION IN FLIGHT 3 Limitations of the Senses Visual Sense Nonvisual Senses Sluggish source

More information

Sensation and Perception. What We Will Cover in This Section. Sensation

Sensation and Perception. What We Will Cover in This Section. Sensation Sensation and Perception Dr. Dennis C. Sweeney 2/18/2009 Sensation.ppt 1 What We Will Cover in This Section Overview Psychophysics Sensations Hearing Vision Touch Taste Smell Kinesthetic Perception 2/18/2009

More information

Object Perception. 23 August PSY Object & Scene 1

Object Perception. 23 August PSY Object & Scene 1 Object Perception Perceiving an object involves many cognitive processes, including recognition (memory), attention, learning, expertise. The first step is feature extraction, the second is feature grouping

More information

Sensation and Perception

Sensation and Perception Sensation and Perception PSY 100: Foundations of Contemporary Psychology Basic Terms Sensation: the activation of receptors in the various sense organs Perception: the method by which the brain takes all

More information

Vision V Perceiving Movement

Vision V Perceiving Movement Vision V Perceiving Movement Overview of Topics Chapter 8 in Goldstein (chp. 9 in 7th ed.) Movement is tied up with all other aspects of vision (colour, depth, shape perception...) Differentiating self-motion

More information

Vision V Perceiving Movement

Vision V Perceiving Movement Vision V Perceiving Movement Overview of Topics Chapter 8 in Goldstein (chp. 9 in 7th ed.) Movement is tied up with all other aspects of vision (colour, depth, shape perception...) Differentiating self-motion

More information

ISSN: X Impact factor: (Volume3, Issue1) Available online at: Human Depth Perception Kiran Kumari Department of Physics

ISSN: X Impact factor: (Volume3, Issue1) Available online at:  Human Depth Perception Kiran Kumari Department of Physics Ajit Kumar Sharma Department of BCA, R.N.College, Hajipur (Vaishali),Bihar ajit_rnc@yahoo.com ISSN: 2454-132X Impact factor: 4.295 (Volume3, Issue1) Available online at: www.ijariit.com Human Depth Perception

More information

PSY 310: Sensory and Perceptual Processes 1

PSY 310: Sensory and Perceptual Processes 1 Size perception PSY 310 Greg Francis Lecture 22 Why the cars look like toys. Our visual system is useful for identifying the properties of objects in the world Surface (color, texture) Location (depth)

More information

Sensation & Perception

Sensation & Perception Sensation & Perception What is sensation & perception? Detection of emitted or reflected by Done by sense organs Process by which the and sensory information Done by the How does work? receptors detect

More information

COGS 101A: Sensation and Perception

COGS 101A: Sensation and Perception COGS 101A: Sensation and Perception 1 Virginia R. de Sa Department of Cognitive Science UCSD Lecture 9: Motion perception Course Information 2 Class web page: http://cogsci.ucsd.edu/ desa/101a/index.html

More information

Chapter 4 PSY 100 Dr. Rick Grieve Western Kentucky University

Chapter 4 PSY 100 Dr. Rick Grieve Western Kentucky University Chapter 4 Sensation and Perception PSY 100 Dr. Rick Grieve Western Kentucky University Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Sensation and Perception Sensation The process of stimulating the

More information

Vision. Sensation & Perception. Functional Organization of the Eye. Functional Organization of the Eye. Functional Organization of the Eye

Vision. Sensation & Perception. Functional Organization of the Eye. Functional Organization of the Eye. Functional Organization of the Eye Vision Sensation & Perception Part 3 - Vision Visible light is the form of electromagnetic radiation our eyes are designed to detect. However, this is only a narrow band of the range of energy at different

More information

Chapter 6: Perception

Chapter 6: Perception Chapter 6: Perception Perception The organization and interpretation of our sensations. It is how we create meaning for what we see, touch, hear, feel and smell. Selective Attention: the idea that we are

More information

Moon Illusion. (McCready, ; 1. What is Moon Illusion and what it is not

Moon Illusion. (McCready, ;  1. What is Moon Illusion and what it is not Moon Illusion (McCready, 1997-2007; http://facstaff.uww.edu/mccreadd/index.html) 1. What is Moon Illusion and what it is not 2. Aparent distance theory (SD only) 3. Visual angle contrast theory (VSD) 4.

More information

Motion perception PSY 310 Greg Francis. Lecture 24. Aperture problem

Motion perception PSY 310 Greg Francis. Lecture 24. Aperture problem Motion perception PSY 310 Greg Francis Lecture 24 How do you see motion here? Aperture problem A detector that only sees part of a scene cannot precisely identify the motion direction or speed of an edge

More information

Geog183: Cartographic Design and Geovisualization Spring Quarter 2018 Lecture 2: The human vision system

Geog183: Cartographic Design and Geovisualization Spring Quarter 2018 Lecture 2: The human vision system Geog183: Cartographic Design and Geovisualization Spring Quarter 2018 Lecture 2: The human vision system Bottom line Use GIS or other mapping software to create map form, layout and to handle data Pass

More information

Visual Perception of Images

Visual Perception of Images Visual Perception of Images A processed image is usually intended to be viewed by a human observer. An understanding of how humans perceive visual stimuli the human visual system (HVS) is crucial to the

More information

COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL. Overview

COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL. Overview In normal experience, our eyes are constantly in motion, roving over and around objects and through ever-changing environments. Through this constant scanning, we build up experience data, which is manipulated

More information

Occlusion. Atmospheric Perspective. Height in the Field of View. Seeing Depth The Cue Approach. Monocular/Pictorial

Occlusion. Atmospheric Perspective. Height in the Field of View. Seeing Depth The Cue Approach. Monocular/Pictorial Seeing Depth The Cue Approach Occlusion Monocular/Pictorial Cues that are available in the 2D image Height in the Field of View Atmospheric Perspective 1 Linear Perspective Linear Perspective & Texture

More information

COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL OVERVIEW 1

COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL OVERVIEW 1 OVERVIEW 1 In normal experience, our eyes are constantly in motion, roving over and around objects and through ever-changing environments. Through this constant scanning, we build up experiential data,

More information

Sensation and Perception

Sensation and Perception Sensation v. Perception Sensation and Perception Chapter 5 Vision: p. 135-156 Sensation vs. Perception Physical stimulus Physiological response Sensory experience & interpretation Example vision research

More information

7Motion Perception. 7 Motion Perception. 7 Computation of Visual Motion. Chapter 7

7Motion Perception. 7 Motion Perception. 7 Computation of Visual Motion. Chapter 7 7Motion Perception Chapter 7 7 Motion Perception Computation of Visual Motion Eye Movements Using Motion Information The Man Who Couldn t See Motion 7 Computation of Visual Motion How would you build a

More information

CHAPTER 4. Sensation & Perception. Lecture Overview. Introduction to Sensation & Perception PSYCHOLOGY PSYCHOLOGY PSYCHOLOGY. Understanding Sensation

CHAPTER 4. Sensation & Perception. Lecture Overview. Introduction to Sensation & Perception PSYCHOLOGY PSYCHOLOGY PSYCHOLOGY. Understanding Sensation CHAPTER 4 Sensation & Perception How many senses do we have? Name them. Lecture Overview Understanding Sensation How We See & Hear Our Other Senses Understanding Perception Introduction to Sensation &

More information

Lecture 5. The Visual Cortex. Cortical Visual Processing

Lecture 5. The Visual Cortex. Cortical Visual Processing Lecture 5 The Visual Cortex Cortical Visual Processing 1 Lateral Geniculate Nucleus (LGN) LGN is located in the Thalamus There are two LGN on each (lateral) side of the brain. Optic nerve fibers from eye

More information

D) visual capture. E) perceptual adaptation.

D) visual capture. E) perceptual adaptation. 1. Our inability to consciously perceive all the sensory information available to us at any single point in time best illustrates the necessity of: A) selective attention. B) perceptual adaptation. C)

More information

Perceiving Motion and Events

Perceiving Motion and Events Perceiving Motion and Events Chienchih Chen Yutian Chen The computational problem of motion space-time diagrams: image structure as it changes over time 1 The computational problem of motion space-time

More information

Human Vision and Human-Computer Interaction. Much content from Jeff Johnson, UI Wizards, Inc.

Human Vision and Human-Computer Interaction. Much content from Jeff Johnson, UI Wizards, Inc. Human Vision and Human-Computer Interaction Much content from Jeff Johnson, UI Wizards, Inc. are these guidelines grounded in perceptual psychology and how can we apply them intelligently? Mach bands:

More information

Cameras have finite depth of field or depth of focus

Cameras have finite depth of field or depth of focus Robert Allison, Laurie Wilcox and James Elder Centre for Vision Research York University Cameras have finite depth of field or depth of focus Quantified by depth that elicits a given amount of blur Typically

More information

Discriminating direction of motion trajectories from angular speed and background information

Discriminating direction of motion trajectories from angular speed and background information Atten Percept Psychophys (2013) 75:1570 1582 DOI 10.3758/s13414-013-0488-z Discriminating direction of motion trajectories from angular speed and background information Zheng Bian & Myron L. Braunstein

More information

March 9. Do Now: Explain the Gestalt theory of perception and two examples. EQ- How do we perceive depth and motion?

March 9. Do Now: Explain the Gestalt theory of perception and two examples. EQ- How do we perceive depth and motion? March 9 EQ- How do we perceive depth and motion? Agenda: 1. Perception Theories 2. Brain Games Do Now: Explain the Gestalt theory of perception and two examples. Table of Contents: 87. March 9 & 10 88.

More information

better make it a triple (3 x)

better make it a triple (3 x) Crown 85: Visual Perception: : Structure of and Information Processing in the Retina 1 lectures 5 better make it a triple (3 x) 1 blind spot demonstration (close left eye) blind spot 2 temporal right eye

More information

Chapter 3. Adaptation to disparity but not to perceived depth

Chapter 3. Adaptation to disparity but not to perceived depth Chapter 3 Adaptation to disparity but not to perceived depth The purpose of the present study was to investigate whether adaptation can occur to disparity per se. The adapting stimuli were large random-dot

More information

Lecture Outline. Basic Definitions

Lecture Outline. Basic Definitions Lecture Outline Sensation & Perception The Basics of Sensory Processing Eight Senses Bottom-Up and Top-Down Processing 1 Basic Definitions Sensation: stimulation of sense organs by sensory input Transduction:

More information

MOTION PARALLAX AND ABSOLUTE DISTANCE. Steven H. Ferris NAVAL SUBMARINE MEDICAL RESEARCH LABORATORY NAVAL SUBMARINE MEDICAL CENTER REPORT NUMBER 673

MOTION PARALLAX AND ABSOLUTE DISTANCE. Steven H. Ferris NAVAL SUBMARINE MEDICAL RESEARCH LABORATORY NAVAL SUBMARINE MEDICAL CENTER REPORT NUMBER 673 MOTION PARALLAX AND ABSOLUTE DISTANCE by Steven H. Ferris NAVAL SUBMARINE MEDICAL RESEARCH LABORATORY NAVAL SUBMARINE MEDICAL CENTER REPORT NUMBER 673 Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, Navy Department Research

More information

Plan. Vision Solves Problems. Distal vs. proximal stimulus. Vision as an inverse problem. Unconscious inference (Helmholtz)

Plan. Vision Solves Problems. Distal vs. proximal stimulus. Vision as an inverse problem. Unconscious inference (Helmholtz) The Art and Science of Depiction Vision Solves Problems Plan Vision as an cognitive process Computational theory of vision Constancy, invariants Fredo Durand MIT- Lab for Computer Science Intro to Visual

More information

Vision. The eye. Image formation. Eye defects & corrective lenses. Visual acuity. Colour vision. Lecture 3.5

Vision. The eye. Image formation. Eye defects & corrective lenses. Visual acuity. Colour vision. Lecture 3.5 Lecture 3.5 Vision The eye Image formation Eye defects & corrective lenses Visual acuity Colour vision Vision http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2009/04/schizoillusion/ Perception of light--- eye-brain

More information

Perceiving binocular depth with reference to a common surface

Perceiving binocular depth with reference to a common surface Perception, 2000, volume 29, pages 1313 ^ 1334 DOI:10.1068/p3113 Perceiving binocular depth with reference to a common surface Zijiang J He Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of

More information

Dan Kersten Computational Vision Lab Psychology Department, U. Minnesota SUnS kersten.org

Dan Kersten Computational Vision Lab Psychology Department, U. Minnesota SUnS kersten.org How big is it? Dan Kersten Computational Vision Lab Psychology Department, U. Minnesota SUnS 2009 kersten.org NIH R01 EY015261 NIH P41 008079, P30 NS057091 and the MIND Institute Huseyin Boyaci Bilkent

More information

Bottom-up and Top-down Perception Bottom-up perception

Bottom-up and Top-down Perception Bottom-up perception Bottom-up and Top-down Perception Bottom-up perception Physical characteristics of stimulus drive perception Realism Top-down perception Knowledge, expectations, or thoughts influence perception Constructivism:

More information

Chapter 5: Sensation and Perception

Chapter 5: Sensation and Perception Chapter 5: Sensation and Perception All Senses have 3 Characteristics Sense organs: Eyes, Nose, Ears, Skin, Tongue gather information about your environment 1. Transduction 2. Adaptation 3. Sensation/Perception

More information

CSC Stereography Course I. What is Stereoscopic Photography?... 3 A. Binocular Vision Depth perception due to stereopsis

CSC Stereography Course I. What is Stereoscopic Photography?... 3 A. Binocular Vision Depth perception due to stereopsis CSC Stereography Course 101... 3 I. What is Stereoscopic Photography?... 3 A. Binocular Vision... 3 1. Depth perception due to stereopsis... 3 2. Concept was understood hundreds of years ago... 3 3. Stereo

More information

Drawing Form. A primer for creating the illusion of three-dimensional form and space on two-dimensional surfaces. William R.

Drawing Form. A primer for creating the illusion of three-dimensional form and space on two-dimensional surfaces. William R. Drawing Form A primer for creating the illusion of three-dimensional form and space on two-dimensional surfaces William R. Benedict Architecture Dept. Cal Poly 2 8/2007 Drawing Form William R. Benedict

More information

Perception. Selective Attention focus of conscious awareness on a particular stimulus. Cocktail Party Effect

Perception. Selective Attention focus of conscious awareness on a particular stimulus. Cocktail Party Effect Perception Aoccudrnig to rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it deosn t mttaer in what oredr the ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoetnt tihng is that the frist and lsat ltteer be at the rghit pclae.

More information

The eye, displays and visual effects

The eye, displays and visual effects The eye, displays and visual effects Week 2 IAT 814 Lyn Bartram Visible light and surfaces Perception is about understanding patterns of light. Visible light constitutes a very small part of the electromagnetic

More information

Sensation and Perception. Sensation. Sensory Receptors. Sensation. General Properties of Sensory Systems

Sensation and Perception. Sensation. Sensory Receptors. Sensation. General Properties of Sensory Systems Sensation and Perception Psychology I Sjukgymnastprogrammet May, 2012 Joel Kaplan, Ph.D. Dept of Clinical Neuroscience Karolinska Institute joel.kaplan@ki.se General Properties of Sensory Systems Sensation:

More information

Chapter Six Chapter Six

Chapter Six Chapter Six Chapter Six Chapter Six Vision Sight begins with Light The advantages of electromagnetic radiation (Light) as a stimulus are Electromagnetic energy is abundant, travels VERY quickly and in fairly straight

More information

CogSysIII Lecture 2: Perception and Ergonomics

CogSysIII Lecture 2: Perception and Ergonomics CogSysIII Lecture 2: Perception and Ergonomics Human Computer Interaction SS 2005 Ute Schmid (lecture) Emanuel Kitzelmann (practice) Applied Computer Science, Bamberg University CogSysIII Lecture 2: Perception

More information

CogSysIII Lecture 2: Perception and Ergonomics

CogSysIII Lecture 2: Perception and Ergonomics CogSysIII Lecture 2: Perception and Ergonomics Human Computer Interaction SS 2006 Ute Schmid (lecture) Emanuel Kitzelmann (practice) Applied Computer Science, Bamberg University CogSysIII Lecture 2: Perception

More information

Chapter 2 Visual Perception: Basic Processes

Chapter 2 Visual Perception: Basic Processes Cognitve Psychology A Students s Handbook 1. Mai 2002 Chapter 2 Visual Perception: Basic Processes CHAPTER OVERVIEW (SUMMARY) 1. Perceptional organisation: The Gestalt psychologists identified several

More information

ANUMBER of electronic manufacturers have launched

ANUMBER of electronic manufacturers have launched IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON CIRCUITS AND SYSTEMS FOR VIDEO TECHNOLOGY, VOL. 22, NO. 5, MAY 2012 811 Effect of Vergence Accommodation Conflict and Parallax Difference on Binocular Fusion for Random Dot Stereogram

More information

PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE. Research Report

PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE. Research Report Research Report STEREOSCOPIC SURFACE INTERPOLATION SUPPORTS LIGHTNESS CONSTANCY Laurie M. Wilcox and Philip A. Duke Centre for Vision Research, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Abstract The human

More information

Output Devices - Visual

Output Devices - Visual IMGD 5100: Immersive HCI Output Devices - Visual Robert W. Lindeman Associate Professor Department of Computer Science Worcester Polytechnic Institute gogo@wpi.edu Overview Here we are concerned with technology

More information

Slide 4 Now we have the same components that we find in our eye. The analogy is made clear in this slide. Slide 5 Important structures in the eye

Slide 4 Now we have the same components that we find in our eye. The analogy is made clear in this slide. Slide 5 Important structures in the eye Vision 1 Slide 2 The obvious analogy for the eye is a camera, and the simplest camera is a pinhole camera: a dark box with light-sensitive film on one side and a pinhole on the other. The image is made

More information

SUBJECTIVE CONTOURS AND APPARENT DEPTH 1

SUBJECTIVE CONTOURS AND APPARENT DEPTH 1 Psychological Review 1972, Vol. 79, No. 4, 3S9-367 SUBJECTIVE CONTOURS AND APPARENT DEPTH 1 STANLEY COREN * New School for Social Research The phenomenal appearance of contours in the absence of abrupt

More information