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Research article summary (published 29 Sep 2002):

The perception and discrimination of local 3-D surface structure from deforming and disparate boundary contours.

Full Abstract

In a series of four experiments, we evaluated observers' abilities to perceive and discriminate ordinal depth relationships between separated local surface regions for objects depicted by static, deforming, and disparate boundary contours or silhouettes. Comparisons were also made between judgments made for silhouettes and for objects defined by surface texture, which permits judgment based on conventional static texture gradients, conventional stereopsis, and conventional structure-from-motion. In all the experiments, the observers were able to detect, with relatively high precision, ordinal depth relationships, an aspect of local three-dimensional (3-D) structure, from boundary contours or silhouettes. The results of the experiments clearly demonstrate that the static, disparate, and deforming boundary contours of solid objects are perceptually important optical sources of information about 3-D shape. Other factors that were found to affect performance were the amount of separation between the local surface regions, the proximity or closeness of the regions to the boundary contour itself, and for the conditions with deforming contours, the overall magnitude of the boundary deformation.

 

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Author information

Author/s: Norman, J Farley (JF); Raines, Shane R (SR);

Affiliation: Department of Psychology, Western Kentucky University, Bowling Green, Kentucky 42101, USA. farley.norman(-atsign-)wku.edu

Journal and publication information

Publication Type: Journal Article

Journal: Perception & psychophysics (Percept Psychophys), published in United States. (Language: eng)

Reference: 2002-Oct; vol 64 (issue 7) : pp 1145-59

Dates: Created 2002/12/19; Completed 2003/01/23; Revised 2004/11/17;

PMID: 12489668, status: MEDLINE (last retrieval date: 12/26/2008)

Sourced from the National Library of Medicine. Abstract text and other information may be subject to copyright.

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