Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4034178 Vision Research 2011 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

This essay reviews major developments – empirical and theoretical – in the field of binocular vision during the last 25 years. We limit our survey primarily to work on human stereopsis, binocular rivalry and binocular contrast summation, with discussion where relevant of single-unit neurophysiology and human brain imaging. We identify several key controversies that have stimulated important work on these problems. In the case of stereopsis those controversies include position vs. phase encoding of disparity, dependence of disparity limits on spatial scale, role of occlusion in binocular depth and surface perception, and motion in 3D. In the case of binocular rivalry, controversies include eye vs. stimulus rivalry, role of “top-down” influences on rivalry dynamics, and the interaction of binocular rivalry and stereopsis. Concerning binocular contrast summation, the essay focuses on two representative models that highlight the evolving complexity in this field of study.

Research highlights► Relative roles of phase and position based disparity computations. ► Resurgence of interest in occlusion cues. ► Recent insights into binocular rivalry. ► Binocular contrast summation models.

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