Paper
29 December 1977 Geometric And Physiological Aspects Of Depth Perception
Ken Nakayama
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Abstract
Seeing in depth is such a natural and automatic part of human experience that its basis has remained largely unconscious, taken for granted. Indeed, it took some of the most inventive minds of the Italian Renaissance to overcome the automatic tendency of seeing objects in depth and at their true size. Only after an intense effort did they realize that to paint depth required something much different than painting what was seen, requiring instead an entirely new type of geometry, the geometry of perspective. So it seems that the geometrical study of depth perception has had a very long and interesting history, becoming a highly developed discipline long before the rise of modern science.
© (1977) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Ken Nakayama "Geometric And Physiological Aspects Of Depth Perception", Proc. SPIE 0120, Three-Dimensional Imaging, (29 December 1977); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.955728
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Cited by 18 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Eye

Visualization

Retina

3D image processing

Motion analysis

Neurons

Optical flow

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