Nakayama K, Shimojo S
Smith-Kettlewell Eye Research Institute, San Francisco, CA 94115.
Vision Res. 1990;30(11):1811-25. doi: 10.1016/0042-6989(90)90161-d.
Distant surfaces are occluded by nearer surfaces to different extents in the two eyes, leading to the existence of unpaired image points visible in one eye and not the other. An ecological analysis of the real world situation that could have given rise to such unpaired points indicates the presence of a depth constraint zone, defined by visibility lines between which possible real world points must lie. The leading edge of this zone starts at the edge of a fused binocular occluding surface and recedes linearly with increases in horizontal distance to the unpaired point. Psychophysical evidence indicates that the human visual system makes use of this unpaired information in a remarkably adaptive manner, showing an increase in perceived depth for increasing horizontal separations between the unpaired target and fused edge, at least over a significant angular range (approx. 25-40 min arc). We also show that unpaired points in binocular images can lead to the formation of subjective occluding contours and surface having the qualitatively appropriate sign of depth. Furthermore, we show that the visual system could not recover depth of unpaired points camouflaged from the other eye against silhouettes. Our findings indicate that the visual system makes use of occlusive relations in the real world to recover depth, contour, and surface from unpaired points. The fact that such processes must utilize eye-of-origin information implies that they share this essential characteristic with classical or Wheatstone stereopsis. The necessity of eye-of-origin information also suggests that the processing may begin relatively early in cortical visual processing, possibly as early as V1. Finally, the novel emergence of subjective occluding contours from unpaired monocular stimuli raises the possibility that this process is mediated by visual experience, built up by the association of unpaired points and occluding contours.
在两只眼睛中,较近的表面会以不同程度遮挡较远的表面,导致存在单眼可见而另一只眼不可见的非配对图像点。对可能产生这种非配对点的现实世界情况进行的生态学分析表明,存在一个深度约束区,该区域由可见线定义,可能的现实世界点必须位于这些可见线之间。这个区域的前沿始于融合的双眼遮挡表面的边缘,并随着到非配对点的水平距离增加而线性后退。心理物理学证据表明,人类视觉系统以一种显著的适应性方式利用这种非配对信息,至少在相当大的角度范围内(约25 - 40分视角),随着非配对目标与融合边缘之间水平间距的增加,感知深度也会增加。我们还表明,双眼图像中的非配对点可导致形成主观遮挡轮廓和具有定性适当深度标志的表面。此外,我们表明视觉系统无法从另一只眼睛对轮廓的伪装中恢复非配对点的深度。我们的研究结果表明,视觉系统利用现实世界中的遮挡关系从非配对点恢复深度、轮廓和表面。这些过程必须利用眼睛来源信息这一事实意味着它们与经典的或惠斯顿立体视觉具有这一基本特征。眼睛来源信息的必要性还表明,处理可能在皮层视觉处理的相对早期开始,可能早在V1区。最后,从非配对单眼刺激中新颖地出现主观遮挡轮廓增加了这样一种可能性,即这个过程是由视觉经验介导的,这种经验是通过非配对点和遮挡轮廓的关联建立起来的。