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Binocular Disparity

Binocular Disparity. points nearer than horopter have crossed disparity points farther than horopter have uncrossed disparity. The Horopter. Binocular Disparity. Why don’t we see double vision?. Binocular Disparity. Why don’t we see double vision?

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Binocular Disparity

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  1. Binocular Disparity • points nearer than horopter have crossed disparity • points farther than horopter have uncrossed disparity The Horopter

  2. Binocular Disparity • Why don’t we see double vision?

  3. Binocular Disparity • Why don’t we see double vision? • Images with a small enough disparity are fused into a single image

  4. Binocular Disparity • Why don’t we see double vision? • Images with a small enough disparity are fused into a single image • The region of space that contains images with close enough disparity to be fused is called Panum’s Area

  5. Binocular Disparity • Panum’s Area extends just in front of and just behind the horopter

  6. Binocular Disparity • Panum’s Area extends just in front of and just behind the horopter • Images outside of Panum’s area are often blurry because accommodation is reflexively set according to vergence

  7. Stereopsis • Our brains interpret crossed and uncrossed disparity as depth • That process is called stereoscopic depth perception or simply stereopsis

  8. Stereopsis • Stereopsis requires that the brain can encode the two retinal images independently

  9. Stereopsis • Primary Visual cortex normally keeps input from the eyes separate • If normal input is restricted during development, the cortical representation of the “bad” eye is reduced • Amblyopia can result

  10. Amblyopia • Amblyopia is a visual deficit in which one eye has poor vision because the brain never developed the ability to use signals from that retina

  11. Amblyopia • Amblyopia is a visual deficit in which one eye has poor vision because the brain never developed the ability to use signals from that retina • Usually caused by • strabismus - when eyes don’t lock onto the same point • anisometropia - when one eye has very bad optics and the other is normal

  12. Amblyopia • People with Amblyopia can’t see stereograms

  13. Stereograms • seeing depth requires “only” two different images on the retina

  14. Stereograms • seeing depth requires “only” two different images on the retina • this could be accomplished by an optical device that projects separate images into the two eyes

  15. Presenting Binocular Images • Various ways to add depth: • 1. Stereoscope

  16. Stereograms Divider Left Eye Right Eye • Right eye sees face to the right; left eye sees face to the left therefore: • uncrossed disparity • Face appears behind the square

  17. Stereograms Divider Left Eye Right Eye What would you see?

  18. Stereograms Divider Left Eye Right Eye • Right eye sees face to the left; left eye sees face to the right therefore: • crossed disparity • Face appears in front of square

  19. Presenting Binocular Images • Various ways to add depth: • glasses with different lenses

  20. Presenting Binocular Images • Various ways to add depth: • glasses with different lenses

  21. Presenting Binocular Images • Various ways to add depth: • glasses with different lenses

  22. Presenting Binocular Images • Various ways to add depth: • LCD Shutter Glasses

  23. Gregory

  24. Science • Science is like a set of procedures: Make a Hypothesis Identify a question Make a Prediction Prediction Fails Prediction holds Test It

  25. Example: The horizontal-vertical illusion

  26. Example: The horizontal-vertical illusion • Question:

  27. Example: The horizontal-vertical illusion • Question: Why does the vertical line seem longer? • Hypothesis:

  28. Example: The horizontal-vertical illusion • Question: Why does the vertical line seem longer? • Hypothesis: Wundt -> vertical and horizontal eye movements scan the image differently • Prediction:

  29. Example: The horizontal-vertical illusion • Question: Why does the vertical line seem longer? • Hypothesis: Wundt -> vertical and horizontal eye movements scan the image differently • Prediction: Stabilized image should eliminate the illusion • Test:

  30. Example: The horizontal-vertical illusion • Question: Why does the vertical line seem longer? • Hypothesis: Wundt -> vertical and horizontal eye movements scan the image differently • Prediction: Stabilized image should eliminate the illusion • Test: Illusion is still present in afterimage!

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