The ability to visually perceive distances in depth was evaluated in two experiments. In both experiments, the observers were required to bisect a distance interval oriented in depth (8 m total extent in Experiment 1 and 7 m in Experiment 2). The purpose of Experiment 1 was to examine the effects of environmental context (indoors in the dark, indoors in the light, and outdoors) and monocular versus binocular viewing. The purpose of Experiment 2 was to manipulate linear perspective to determine its importance for perceiving depth interval magnitudes. In the outdoor environment, the observers' bisection judgments indicated perceptual compression of farther distances similar to that obtained in many previous studies. In contrast, the observers' judgments in the indoor lighted environment were consistent with the perceptual expansion of farther distances. There was also a beneficial effect of binocular viewing upon the precision of the observers' repeated judgments, but the size of this effect was large only within the dark environment. Finally, linear perspective was found to significantly modulate the observers' bisection judgments such that they became accurate only when perspective was available.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.visres.2021.107992 | DOI Listing |
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