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PSYC 330: Perception

PSYC 330: Perception. Depth Perception. The “Real” World and Euclidean Geometry The Retinal World and Projective Geometry Anamorphic art. The Puzzle. Discriminability (sensitivity, or d’) Bias (criterion, or b ). Monocular Cues Binocular Cues. The Tools.

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PSYC 330: Perception

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  1. PSYC 330: Perception Depth Perception

  2. The “Real” World and Euclidean Geometry The Retinal World and Projective Geometry Anamorphic art The Puzzle

  3. Discriminability (sensitivity, or d’) • Bias (criterion, or b )

  4. Monocular Cues Binocular Cues The Tools

  5. Retinal Disparity – differences in image falling on the two retinas Stereopsis -3D vision due to retinal disparity Binocular Cues

  6. Astronomical Parallax

  7. The Finger Test 1. Retinal Disparity 2. Diplopia Horopter Panum’sFusional Area A Demonstration

  8. Stereoscopes and Stereograms The Research

  9. Random Dot Stereograms

  10. Which bits from the left eye should be matched with which bits form the right? Heuristics: Uniqueness Constraint – every feature in left once, right once Continuity Constraint – except at edges, close in image means similar distance The Correspondence Problem

  11. Striate Cortex – binocular cells with two receptive fields (one on each retina) Higher level processing Coding in the Brain

  12. Monocular Depth The Bob Ross Cues

  13. Relative Height in Field Aerial Perspective Texture Gradient Occlusion/Interposition Relative Size Familiar Size Linear Perspective Pictorial Cues for Depth

  14. Accommodation of Lens Convergence/Divergence of Muscles Motion Parallax Non-Pictorial Cues

  15. Committees and Statistics Penny example on pg 157 Bayes Theorem – judgment of event probability influenced by prior events Disagreeing Committee members Putting the Cues Together

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