Linton Paul
Centre for Applied Vision Research, City, University of London, Northampton Square, Clerkenwell, London, EC1V 0HB, UK.
Atten Percept Psychophys. 2020 Aug;82(6):3176-3195. doi: 10.3758/s13414-020-02006-1.
Since Kepler (1604) and Descartes (1637), 'vergence' (the angular rotation of the eyes) has been thought of as one of our most important absolute distance cues. But vergence has never been tested as an absolute distance cue divorced from obvious confounding cues such as binocular disparity. In this article, we control for these confounding cues for the first time by gradually manipulating vergence and find that observers fail to accurately judge distance from vergence. We consider several different interpretations of these results and argue that the most principled response to these results is to question the general effectiveness of vergence as an absolute distance cue. Given that other absolute distance cues (such as motion parallax and vertical disparities) are limited in application, this poses a real challenge to our contemporary understanding of visual scale.
自开普勒(1604年)和笛卡尔(1637年)以来,“辐辏”(眼睛的角向转动)一直被视为我们最重要的绝对距离线索之一。但辐辏从未作为一种脱离明显混淆线索(如双眼视差)的绝对距离线索进行过测试。在本文中,我们首次通过逐步操纵辐辏来控制这些混淆线索,结果发现观察者无法根据辐辏准确判断距离。我们考虑了对这些结果的几种不同解释,并认为对这些结果最合理的回应是质疑辐辏作为绝对距离线索的一般有效性。鉴于其他绝对距离线索(如运动视差和垂直视差)在应用上存在局限性,这对我们当代对视觉尺度的理解构成了真正的挑战。