An application of the optic sphere theory in discrimination of slant with minimal information
Authors: Eriksson L.1; Borjesson E.2
Source: Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, Volume 38, Number 4, December 1997 , pp. 275-287(13)
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
Abstract:
In Johansson and Borjesson (1989), a new theory of visual space perception-the optic sphere theory-was presented in which the hemispheric shape of the retina is utilized for determination of slant of plane surfaces in wide-angle perception. The process of the optic sphere mechanism can be described as the projection of a translating distal line on the optic sphere, and an extrapolation of this projection to a great circle. The determination of the 3-D slant of the distal line is made by identification of points of no change on the great circle during its rotation. The main objective of the present study was to investigate this process as applied to central stimulation of the retina with reduced and minimal information of slant or horizontal orientation. Each stimulus pattern consisted of either two continuous lines or two pairs of dots in motion presented on a computer screen. The pairwise lines and the pairs of dots defined simulated 3-D slants (or horizontal orientations) of different magnitude within each pair, and the subjects' task was to discriminate between these simulated slants. It was shown that the simulations evoke percepts of 3-D slants, and of horizontal orientations, and that it is possible to discriminate between them even from minimal information (pairs of dots). Further, the empirical findings of Borjesson (1994) indicated that longer extrapolations of the projected arc to a point of no change yield less accurate discriminations of slant. We failed to replicate this in Experiment 4, in which case stimulus variables that covaried with extrapolation length were eliminated or minimized. It is suggested that this raises some doubt about discrimination accuracy as dependent on extrapolation length per se. The overall conclusion, however, is that the optic sphere theory represents a possible explanation of, or analogy to, the process utilized by the visual system for determination of the simulated 3-D slants and horizontal orientations in the present study.
Keywords: Slant discrimination; motion perception
Language: English
Document Type: Research article
Affiliations: 1: National Defense Research Establishment, Division of Human Science, Linkoing, Sweden 2: Department of Psychology, Uppsala University, Sweden
Publication date: 1997-12-01
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Psychology
- By this author: Eriksson L. ; Borjesson E.

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