Combining depth cues: effects upon accuracy and speed of performance in a depth-ordering task
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journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 13:06 authored by George Mather, David R. R. Smith<p>Two experiments investigated how the number of available depth cues affected the speed and accuracy of depth-ordering judgements. A series of textured tiles was presented on a computer monitor, with relative depths defined by combinations of contrast, blur and interposition. Subjects were required to move a mouse pointer inside each tile in turn, starting with the tile that appeared nearest, clicking on each. Accuracy of depth-ordering was much higher than chance in all conditions, though performance using the interposition cue alone was worse than in all other conditions. The only difference in reaction time in different cue conditions was in the time elapsed before the first-click. Subjects responded substantially faster when three depth cues were present (0.84 s) than when only one depth cue was present (1.41 s). The improvement in reaction time with cue numerosity is consistent with probability summation between cues extracted by independent processes. © 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.</p>
History
School affiliated with
- School of Psychology (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
Vision ResearchVolume
44Issue
6Pages/Article Number
557-562Publisher
ElsevierExternal DOI
ISSN
0042-6989eISSN
1878-5646Date Submitted
2014-12-03Date Accepted
2003-09-19Date of First Publication
2003-11-19Date of Final Publication
2004-03-01ePrints ID
16110Usage metrics
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