Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4034348 Vision Research 2011 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

We investigated whether a depth aftereffect is better explained in a surface-based organization of depth representation (Nakayama & Shimojo, 1992), where depth is represented in conjunction with surface features, rather than a coordinate-based organization, where depth is represented in conjunction with spatial position. Observers adapted to a stereogram depicting a surface with reference plane and were tested with a surface with either the same contour or position as the adaptation surface. The aftereffect did not depend on test surface position or contour. Thus, a depth aftereffect can be caused by a mechanism that does not depend on grouping by surface contour or position.

Research highlights► Adaptation to relative depth causes a position-invariant aftereffect. ► Surface boundaries do not constrain a depth aftereffect. ► A depth aftereffect is not better explained in a surface-based organization of depth perception than in a coordinate-based organization.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Sensory Systems
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