2005
DOI: 10.1038/nn1553
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Why pictures look right when viewed from the wrong place

Abstract: A picture viewed from its center of projection generates the same retinal image as the original scene, so the viewer perceives the scene correctly. When a picture is viewed from other locations, the retinal image specifies a different scene, but we normally do not notice the changes. We investigated the mechanism underlying this perceptual invariance by studying the perceived shapes of pictured objects viewed from various locations. We also manipulated information about the orientation of the picture surface. … Show more

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Cited by 155 publications
(166 citation statements)
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References 35 publications
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“…focal length lens (Pirenne, 1970;Kubovy, 1986;Vishwanath et al, 2005). Moreover, we can all agree on whether a pictorial depiction of a 3-D object matches the real 3-D object-precisely what separates good drawings from not so good ones.…”
Section: Do We Perceive "Flattened" Depth In Pictures?mentioning
confidence: 80%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…focal length lens (Pirenne, 1970;Kubovy, 1986;Vishwanath et al, 2005). Moreover, we can all agree on whether a pictorial depiction of a 3-D object matches the real 3-D object-precisely what separates good drawings from not so good ones.…”
Section: Do We Perceive "Flattened" Depth In Pictures?mentioning
confidence: 80%
“…If they did, pictures and photographs would not serve the ubiquitous purpose they do. Moreover, there is extensive empirical evidence that pictures convey a consistent and measurable percept of quantitative depth and 3-D shape (Koenderink, van Doorn & Kappers, 1994;Koenderink, van Doorn & Wagemans, 2011;Kubovy, 1986;Vishwanath, Girshick & Banks, 2005). The crucial difference between pictures and real scenes appears to lie in the presence or absence of a qualitative attribute (stereopsis) regardless of the actual 3-D relations perceived.…”
Section: Stereopsis and The Paradox Of Picture Perceptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…An odd fact about the psychology of picture perception is that if our position changes in front of the picture, our view of the depicted object does not change (Vishwanath et al 2005;Cutting 1987;Goldstein 1987;Halloran 1989;Pirenne 1970;Polanyi 1970;Wollheim 1980, pp. 215-216;Matthen 2005, pp.…”
Section: The Picture Surface (A)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since it was not the purpose to test the learning and recognition capability of HTM, but to focus on how to deal with colour, a larger training set was not generated. These results do however indicate another difference between HTM and the human vision system, which is that the human vision system can learn when seeing items in one particular angle, and then recognise from a different angle [4].…”
Section: Htm Implementation Using Colour Imagesmentioning
confidence: 78%