Article

Depth constancy and the absolute vergence anomaly

Details

Citation

Ranson RE, Scarfe P, van Dam LCJ & Hibbard PB (2025) Depth constancy and the absolute vergence anomaly. Vision Research, 226, Art. No.: 108501. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.visres.2024.108501

Abstract
Binocular disparity provides information about the depth structure of objects and surfaces in our environment. Since disparity depends on the distance to objects as well as the depth separation of points, information about distance is required to estimate depth from disparity. Our perception of size and shape is biased, such that far objects appear too small and flattened in depth, and near objects too big and stretched in depth. The current study assessed the extent to which the failure of depth constancy can be accounted for by the uncertainty of distance information provided by vergence. We measured individual differences in vergence noise using a nonius line task, and the degree of depth constancy using a task in which observers judged the magnitude of a depth interval relative to the vertical distance between two targets in the image plane. We found no correlation between the two measures, and show that depth constancy was much poorer than would be expected from vergence noise measured in this way. This limited ability to take account of vergence in the perception of depth is, however, consistent with our poor sensitivity to absolute disparity differences. This absolute disparity anomaly thus also applies to our poor ability to make use of vergence information for absolute distance judgements.

Keywords
Binocular vision; Depth perception; Binocular convergence; Depth constancy

Journal
Vision Research: Volume 226

StatusPublished
FundersThe Leverhulme Trust
Publication date31/01/2025
Publication date online30/11/2024
Date accepted by journal07/10/2024
PublisherElsevier BV
ISSN0042-6989

People (1)

Professor Paul Hibbard

Professor Paul Hibbard

Professor in Psychology, Psychology

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