The Perspective Structure of Visual Space

Luneburg’s model has been the reference for experimental studies of visual space for almost seventy years. His claim for a curved visual space has been a source of inspiration for visual scientists as well as philosophers. The conclusion of many experimental studies has been that Luneburg’s model do...

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Main Author: Casper J Erkelens
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2015-10-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669515613672
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spelling doaj-950e45e5b7f147eb97de55741ca665b72020-11-25T03:34:06ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952015-10-01610.1177/204166951561367210.1177_2041669515613672The Perspective Structure of Visual SpaceCasper J ErkelensLuneburg’s model has been the reference for experimental studies of visual space for almost seventy years. His claim for a curved visual space has been a source of inspiration for visual scientists as well as philosophers. The conclusion of many experimental studies has been that Luneburg’s model does not describe visual space in various tasks and conditions. Remarkably, no alternative model has been suggested. The current study explores perspective transformations of Euclidean space as a model for visual space. Computations show that the geometry of perspective spaces is considerably different from that of Euclidean space. Collinearity but not parallelism is preserved in perspective space and angles are not invariant under translation and rotation. Similar relationships have shown to be properties of visual space. Alley experiments performed early in the nineteenth century have been instrumental in hypothesizing curved visual spaces. Alleys were computed in perspective space and compared with reconstructed alleys of Blumenfeld. Parallel alleys were accurately described by perspective geometry. Accurate distance alleys were derived from parallel alleys by adjusting the interstimulus distances according to the size-distance invariance hypothesis. Agreement between computed and experimental alleys and accommodation of experimental results that rejected Luneburg’s model show that perspective space is an appropriate model for how we perceive orientations and angles. The model is also appropriate for perceived distance ratios between stimuli but fails to predict perceived distances.https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669515613672
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Casper J Erkelens
spellingShingle Casper J Erkelens
The Perspective Structure of Visual Space
i-Perception
author_facet Casper J Erkelens
author_sort Casper J Erkelens
title The Perspective Structure of Visual Space
title_short The Perspective Structure of Visual Space
title_full The Perspective Structure of Visual Space
title_fullStr The Perspective Structure of Visual Space
title_full_unstemmed The Perspective Structure of Visual Space
title_sort perspective structure of visual space
publisher SAGE Publishing
series i-Perception
issn 2041-6695
publishDate 2015-10-01
description Luneburg’s model has been the reference for experimental studies of visual space for almost seventy years. His claim for a curved visual space has been a source of inspiration for visual scientists as well as philosophers. The conclusion of many experimental studies has been that Luneburg’s model does not describe visual space in various tasks and conditions. Remarkably, no alternative model has been suggested. The current study explores perspective transformations of Euclidean space as a model for visual space. Computations show that the geometry of perspective spaces is considerably different from that of Euclidean space. Collinearity but not parallelism is preserved in perspective space and angles are not invariant under translation and rotation. Similar relationships have shown to be properties of visual space. Alley experiments performed early in the nineteenth century have been instrumental in hypothesizing curved visual spaces. Alleys were computed in perspective space and compared with reconstructed alleys of Blumenfeld. Parallel alleys were accurately described by perspective geometry. Accurate distance alleys were derived from parallel alleys by adjusting the interstimulus distances according to the size-distance invariance hypothesis. Agreement between computed and experimental alleys and accommodation of experimental results that rejected Luneburg’s model show that perspective space is an appropriate model for how we perceive orientations and angles. The model is also appropriate for perceived distance ratios between stimuli but fails to predict perceived distances.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669515613672
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