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A looming-recession threshold

K M Steele1, M E Stritto, W L Brigner

  • 1Appalachian State University, USA.

Perceptual and Motor Skills
|April 1, 1996
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

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When a rectangle

Area of Science:

  • Visual perception
  • Psychophysics
  • Depth perception

Background:

  • The perception of depth is crucial for navigating and interacting with the environment.
  • Understanding how visual cues are processed to create a sense of depth is a fundamental area of research in visual science.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the relationship between the horizontal locus of magnification-minification in an outline rectangle and the perception of apparent depth.
  • To determine if specific geometric properties of a visual stimulus can elicit depth percepts associated with looming and recession.

Main Methods:

  • Participants (N=21) were presented with an outline rectangle stimulus.
  • The horizontal locus of magnification-minification of the rectangle was systematically varied.
  • Observers reported their subjective experience of apparent depth, specifically noting characteristics of looming (approaching) and recession (receding).

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Main Results:

  • A significant proportion of observers (16 out of 21) reported apparent depth.
  • This depth perception was characterized as looming and recession.
  • The effect was observed when the horizontal locus of magnification-minification exceeded one-fourth of the rectangle's horizontal dimension.

Conclusions:

  • The geometric properties of a simple outline rectangle, specifically the locus of its changing dimensions, can induce a compelling perception of depth.
  • This finding suggests that the visual system can interpret certain dynamic 2D transformations as indicative of 3D motion, specifically forward and backward movement.
  • The results contribute to our understanding of the psychophysics of depth perception and the visual cues that drive looming and recession experiences.