Palmer Stephen E, Ghose Tandra
Psychology Department, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-1650, USA.
Psychol Sci. 2008 Jan;19(1):77-84. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2008.02049.x.
Extremal edges (EEs) are projections of viewpoint-specific horizons of self-occlusion on smooth convex surfaces. An ecological analysis of viewpoint constraints suggests that an EE surface is likely to be closer to the observer than the non-EE surface on the other side of the edge. In two experiments, one using shading gradients and the other using texture gradients, we demonstrated that EEs operate as strong cues to relative depth perception and figure-ground organization. Image regions with an EE along the shared border were overwhelmingly perceived as closer than either flat or equally convex surfaces without an EE along that border. A further demonstration suggests that EEs are more powerful than classical figure-ground cues, including even the joint effects of small size, convexity, and surroundedness.
极值边缘(EEs)是自遮挡的特定视角视野在光滑凸面上的投影。对视角限制的生态学分析表明,在边缘另一侧,EE表面可能比非EE表面更靠近观察者。在两项实验中,一项使用明暗梯度,另一项使用纹理梯度,我们证明了EEs作为相对深度感知和图形-背景组织的强烈线索发挥作用。沿着共享边界有EE的图像区域被压倒性地感知为比沿着该边界没有EE的平面或同等凸面更近。进一步的证明表明,EEs比经典的图形-背景线索更强大,甚至包括小尺寸、凸度和被包围的联合效应。