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Motion and binocular disparity processing: Two sides of two different coins

Authors :
Christian, Quaia
Edmond J, FitzGibbon
Lance M, Optican
Bruce G, Cumming
Source :
Progress in brain research. 248
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

From a mathematical point of view, extracting motion and disparity signals from a binocular visual stream requires very similar operations, applied over time for motion and across eyes for disparity. This similarity is reflected in the theories that have been proposed to describe the neural mechanisms used by the brain to extract these signals. At the behavioral level there are, however, several differences in how humans react to these stimuli, which presumably reflect differences in how these signals are processed by the brain. Here we highlight three such differences: the degree to which different axes of motion/disparity are treated isotropically, the importance of reference signals, and the rules that underlie the combination of 1D signals to extract 2D signals.

Details

ISSN :
18757855
Volume :
248
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Progress in brain research
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........b12973d9f2e9c78611238a3082156772