Abstract

Perceived depth was studied when an ambiguous stereopair (containing both crossed and uncrossed disparity) was viewed following exposure to an unambiguous stereopair (containing either crossed or uncrossed disparity). The “depth marker” effect (with the ambiguous figure seen in the same depth plane as the immediately preceding unambiguous figure) reported by Julesz (1964) was not replicated. Instead the ambiguous figure appeared near following exposure to uncrossed disparity and far after inspection of crossed disparity. This bias in depth judgments is attributed to disparity-selective masking ot a component within a compound stereospatial display.

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