The stereoscopic anisotropy affects manual pointing
Authors: Bradshaw, Mark F.; Hibbard, Paul B.; Van Der Willigen, R.; Watt, S.J.; Simpson, P.J.
Source: Spatial Vision, Volume 15, Number 4, 2002 , pp. 443-458(16)
Publisher: VSP, an imprint of Brill
Abstract:
Although binocular disparity can in principle provide absolute depth information, perceived stereoscopic depth depends on the relative disparities between points and their spatial arrangement. An example of this is the stereoscopic anisotropy—observers typically perceive less depth for stereoscopic surfaces when depth varies in the horizontal direction than in the vertical direction. We investigated whether this anisotropy also affects manual pointing. Participants were presented with stereograms depicting surfaces that were slanted in depth about either a horizontal axis (inclination) or a vertical axis (slant), and were asked either to point to the edge of a surface, or to estimate its inclination or slant. For both tasks, a clear anisotropy was observed, with participants perceiving greater depth, and also pointing out steeper surfaces, for inclined surfaces than for slanted surfaces. We conclude that both perception and the control of action are subject to a similar stereoscopic anisotropy, and that performance on the two tasks relies on similar depth processing mechanisms.Keywords: PERCEPTION AND ACTION; STEREOPSIS; POINTING
Document Type: Research article
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156856802320401900
Publication date: 2002-10-01
- For more content see: Seeing and Perceiving.
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Biology , Optics & Light , Psychology
- By this author: Bradshaw, Mark F. ; Hibbard, Paul B. ; Van Der Willigen, R. ; Watt, S.J. ; Simpson, P.J.

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