1 / 74

深度與大小

Chapter 10. 深度與大小. 深度知覺之線索取向 (cue approach to depth perception). 尋找視覺影像( proximal stimulus )中與環境的深度(distal stimulus)有關的 線索 訊息(cues ),我們透過經驗建立這些深度線索與實際深度的關連性,而造成深度知覺。. 根據我們對於眼球位置與眼球肌肉緊張度的感受,而產生的深度線索 限近距離有用(手臂距離) Convergence 因需觀看近物,兩眼球向內移動. 感受到的 convergence 愈多,表示物體距離愈近 雙眼線索.

Download Presentation

深度與大小

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 10 深度與大小

  2. 深度知覺之線索取向(cue approach to depth perception) • 尋找視覺影像(proximal stimulus)中與環境的深度(distal stimulus)有關的線索訊息(cues ),我們透過經驗建立這些深度線索與實際深度的關連性,而造成深度知覺。

  3. 根據我們對於眼球位置與眼球肌肉緊張度的感受,而產生的深度線索根據我們對於眼球位置與眼球肌肉緊張度的感受,而產生的深度線索 限近距離有用(手臂距離) Convergence 因需觀看近物,兩眼球向內移動 感受到的convergence 愈多,表示物體距離愈近 雙眼線索 眼球運動線索(Oculomotor cues)

  4. 眼球運動線索(Oculomotor cues) • Accommodation • 隨物體距離不同,水晶體形狀會改變以利聚焦 • 水晶體愈平,表示距離愈遠 • 單眼線索

  5. 單眼線索 (monocular cues) • 圖畫線索(pictorial cues) • Alberti’s window

  6. 單眼線索 (monocular cues) • 遮蔽(occlusion) • 提供相對距離線索 • 被遮蔽者較遠 • 相對高度 • 底部較高的離觀察者較遠 • 但是,物體若落在水平線以上,那麼底部較低的較遠

  7. Fig. 8-3, p. 170

  8. 單眼線索 (monocular cues) • 相對大小 • 小的比較遠 (demo-monster) • 透視匯聚(perspective convergence) • 匯聚端較遠

  9. 單眼線索 (monocular cues) • 熟悉的尺寸 • 原本較大的被認為較遠 • 雙眼觀察則沒有這種錯覺

  10. 單眼線索 (monocular cues) • 空氣透視(atmosphere perspective) • 不清楚的比較遠

  11. Fig. 8-5, p. 171

  12. 單眼線索 (monocular cues) • 質地遞變 • 密的較遠

  13. 單眼線索 (monocular cues) • 陰影 • 陰影的特性協助瞭解物體在空間中的位置

  14. 運動線索(movement-produced cues) • 觀看者運動而產生的深度線索(單眼)

  15. 運動視差(motion parallax) • 遠的物體動得慢,近的物體動得快link • 比凝視點近的物體,其移動與運動方向相反;比凝視點遠的物體,其移動與運動方向相同

  16. Fig. 8-10a, p. 173

  17. Fig. 8-10b, p. 173

  18. Table 8.1 Range of effectiveness of different depth cues

  19. 雙眼像差(Binocular disparity) 左右眼的影像差異 雙眼深度訊息

  20. Figure 8.11 Location of images on the retina for the “Two Eyes: Two Viewpoints” demonstration. (a) Both images are on the fovea when the left eye is open. (b) The images are on different places on the retina when the right eye is open.

  21. 雙眼深度訊息 • 立體感(stereopsis) • 對應點(corresponding retinal points)

  22. horopter • 是一個想像的圓,凝視點落在上面,而其上的每個物體會落在兩眼網膜的對應點 Figure 8.13 (a) When the lifeguard looks at Frieda, the image of Frieda, Susan, and Harry fall on corresponding points on the lifeguard’s retinas, and the images of the other swimmers fall on noncorresponding points. (b) The locations of the images of Susan, Frieda, and Harry on the lifeguard’s retina.

  23. 不在horopter上的物體,會落在雙眼網膜的非對應點(noncorresponding points),並形成像差角(angle of disparity) • C與X之夾角 • 離horopter愈遠,像差角愈大 • L與Y之夾角

  24. 交叉型像差(crossed disparity): 落在 horopter之前的物體形成交叉型像差,顯示物體比horopter近 • 非交叉型像差(uncrossed disparity):落在 horopter之後的物體形非成交叉型像差(網膜上的落點向內) ,顯示物體比horopter遠

  25. Horopter Absolute disparity for Carole (how far an object is from the horopter)

  26. Absolute disparity for Frieda Horopter

  27. Relative disparity is the difference between the absolute disparity of two objects. • Absolute disparity • Frieda: 0 ° • Carole: 26 ° • Relative disparity: 26 ° – 0 ° = 26 ° • Offering an advantage as an observer shifts his fixation

  28. Stereoscope (1800’s)

  29. Figure 8.16 The two images of a stereoscopic photograph. The difference between the two images, such as the distances between the front cactus and the window in the two views, creates retinal disparity. This creates a perception of depth when (a) the left image is viewed by the left eye and (b) the right image is viewed by the right eye.

  30. Fig. 8-18, p. 176

  31. 3-D movies • A polarized filter allows only light travelling in one position to pass through. It is made of parallel micro-sized slits that block out all but one position of wave. • A wave in the vertical planepasses through a verticalpolarized filter.A wave in the horizontal planepasses through a horizontalpolarized filter, but would not beable to pass through a verticalpolarized filter.

  32. There are two types of filters in 3-D glasses (i.e. vertical and horizontal). So, one side allows only light travelling in one position to pass through while the other side allows light of the opposite position to pass. • 3-D movies are filmed with a stereoscopic camera that records video much like how the Pathfinder IMP above records images. When a 3-D movie is played, two projectors are used to display both perceptions. Each projects a video polarized (with a filter) onto the screen. Wearing the 3-D glasses, each eye can only take in light from one of the projectors. Therefore, each eye receives a different image. Your brain interprets these two separate images and combines them into one 3-D picture. • Next time you view a 3-D movie, take two set of glasses. Place the right-eye filter and place it over the left-eye filter. It's dark. That because the vertical and horizontal filters are combined and no light can enter. They cancel each other.

  33. 立體相機

  34. 裸眼觀看

  35. Fig. 8-17, p. 176

  36. Also see demo

  37. 純由像差造成的立體感 • 隨機點立體圖(Random dot stereogram)(Julez, 1971) • 深度感只能歸因於像差

  38. 左右眼影像如何match? 對應問題(The correspondence problem) • 根據單眼特徵作匹配? • RDS 呢?

  39. 其他生物的深度知覺 • Animals use the range of cues that humans use • Frontal eyes • binocular disparity. • Lateral eyes • wider view. • important for watching for predators • Bats • echolocation

  40. Depth Perception in Other Species • Locusts use motion parallax to judge distance. • Bats use echolocation to judge the distance of objects in the dark. • They emit sounds and note the interval between when they send them and when they receive the echo.

  41. Figure 10.22 When a bat sends out its pulses, it receives echoes from a number of objects in the environment. This figure shows the echoes received by the bat from (a) a moth located about half a meter away; (b) a tree, located about 2 meters away; and (c) a house, located about 4 meters away. The echoes from each object return to the bat at different times, with echoes from more distant objects taking longer to return. The bat locates the positions of objects in the environment by sensing how long it takes the echoes to return.

  42. 深度知覺的生理基礎 • A neuron in the parietal cortex of a monkey Figure 8.20 Top: gradient stimuli. Bottom: response of neurons in the parietal cortex to each gradient. This neuron fires to the pattern in (c), which the monkey perceives as slanting to the left. (From Tsutsui et al., 2002, 2005.)

  43. Figure 8.21 Disparity tuning curve for a disparity-sensitive neuron. This curve indicates the neural response that occurs when stimuli presented the left and right eyes create different amounts of disparity. (From Uka & DeAngelis, 2003.) 雙眼深度細胞(Binocular depth cell)或像差選擇性細胞(disparity selective cell) 當兩眼影像具有像差時反應最佳

  44. Connecting Binocular Disparity and Depth Perception • Experiment by Blake and Hirsch • Cats were reared by alternating vision between two eyes. • Results showed that they: • had few binocular neurons. • were unable to use binocular disparity to perceive depth.

  45. 單眼養育的貓,皮質雙眼深度細胞數量甚少 • 敏感期(sensitive period)為六個

  46. Neural Responding & Depth Perception • DeAngelis et al. (1998) • Monkey training: depth created by images with different absolute disparity to each eye • Monkey shifted its depth judgment because of a different group of disparity-selective neurons activated. • Primary visual cortex  Ventral and dorsal streams

  47. 大小知覺 (size perception) • 大小知覺與深度知覺有關

  48. Figure 8.25 (a) The visual angle depends on the size of the stimulus (the woman in this example) and its distance from the observer. (b) When the woman moves closer to the observer, the visual angle and the size of the image on the retina increases. This example shows how halving the distance between the stimulus and observer doubles the size of the image on the retina.

  49. Figure 8.26 The “thumb” method of determining the visual angle of an object. When the thumb is at arm’s length, whatever it covers has a visual angle of about 2 degrees. The woman’s thumb covers half the width of her iPod, so we can determine that the visual angle of the iPod’s total width is about 4 degrees.

More Related