Abstract— The effects of interocular luminance differences on stereoscopic depth perception has been investigated. The stimuli were stereoscopic square‐shaped targets created from disparity embedded in a dynamic random‐dot stereogram, which eliminated other cues to depth perception. The results revealed that stereoscopic depth perception survived significant interocular differences in luminance levels, even up to differences of 60%, provided that display luminance was approximately 0.63 cd/m2 or higher. In terms of design criteria, developers of stereo displays can use a fairly large range of interocular luminance levels and still induce good stereo depth perception.
the aftereffect was selective for global optical flow rate, suggesting that the aftereffect reflects gain changes at processing levels where a sense of self-motion is generated. RESULTS were used in a computational model of this MAE, which was a modified framework by van de Grind et al. [Vision Res.44, 2269 (2004)].
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