Solving Occlusion Indeterminacy in Chromatically Homogeneous Patterns
- 1 April 1995
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Perception
- Vol. 24 (4) , 391-403
- https://doi.org/10.1068/p240391
Abstract
Overlapping figures can produce consistent depth stratification even when chromatically homogeneous. Since neither T-junctions nor X-junctions are present in these patterns, the problem arises of what rules determine the direction of depth stratification, ie which surfaces appear in front and which behind. In a series of demonstrations and formal experiments involving perception of stereopsis, motion, transparency, motion in depth, and reversible figures, the validity of the principle that the visual system tends to minimise the formation of interpolated modal contours was tested. The reason why larger surfaces tend to be seen modally in front, rather than behind, would reflect the geometrical property that when, in overlapping objects, larger surfaces are closer there will be shorter occluding boundaries than when smaller surfaces are closer. It is shown that this constraint is independent of the empirical depth cue of relative size. An example is also given of a simple computational strategy that extracts, from chromatically homogeneous patterns, occluding subjective contours corresponding to those perceived by human observers.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Image Segmentation Cues in Motion Processing: Implications for Modularity in VisionJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1993
- The Role of Depth Stratification in the Solution of the Aperture ProblemPerception, 1993
- Experiencing and Perceiving Visual SurfacesScience, 1992
- Perception of partly occluded objects and illusory figures: Evidence for an identity hypothesis.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1992
- A theory of visual interpolation in object perceptionCognitive Psychology, 1991
- Amodal Representation of Occluded Surfaces: Role of Invisible Stimuli in Apparent Motion CorrespondencePerception, 1990
- Reconstructing the third dimension: Interactions between color, texture, motion, binocular disparity, and shapeComputer Vision, Graphics, and Image Processing, 1987
- The Impossibly Twisted Pulfrich PendulumPerception, 1986
- Theory of edge detectionProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1980
- The Perception of TransparencyScientific American, 1974