Surface Attitude Judgements in monocular and stereo textures: a method evaluation

Stella Qian, James, H Elder, Wendy, J Adams, Anisha Parmar, Andrew J Schofield

Research output: Contribution to journalConference abstractpeer-review

Abstract

People can judge the attitude of surfaces in the both ecological valid 3D environments and in 2D representations with no binocular disparity. Many methods have been proposed for measuring perceived surface attitude but the reliability and bias vulnerability of such methods is seldom compared. One concern is that test methods which use the same visual modality as the surfaces under test may introduce bias. We compared 2D, 3D gauge figures which use perspective only and perspective plus disparity cues respectively, and a perspective and disparity free dial method wherein observers set the orientation of two lines to represent perceived tilt and slant. Observers judged tilt and slant for artificial sloped surfaces patterned with randomly orientated squares providing strong perspective cues. Surfaces were presented dichoptically with perspective only (2D) and perspective plus disparity (3D), and monocularly with perspective only. All response methods showed reliable and unbiased responses in tilt judgements. For slant, bias varied between conditions. The dial method produced estimates that correlated best with ground truth and produced the least bias overall, although it tended to underestimate small slants and overestimate large slants. The gauge figure methods were similar and tended to overestimate all slants but were worse for small slants. These results suggest that our textures provide completing cues to slant that resulted in bias when tested within the same visual modality. Thus the dial method introduced least bias. This method is difficult, and introduces individual differences but practice might reduce this making it preferable to gauge figure methods. [This project was funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council; grant number EP/S016260/1.]
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)133
Number of pages1
JournalPerception
Volume50
Issue numberSuppl.1
Early online date1 Dec 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Jan 2022
Event43rd European Conference on Visual Perception (ECVP) 2021 Online - Online
Duration: 22 Aug 202127 Aug 2021
Conference number: 43
https://ecvp2021.org/

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Surface Attitude Judgements in monocular and stereo textures: a method evaluation'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this