Abstract

The influence of stereoscopic vision on the perception of optic flow fields was investigated in experiments based on a recently described illusion. In this illusion, subjects perceive a shift of the center of an expanding optic flow field when it is transparently superimposed by a unidirectional motion pattern. This illusory shift can be explained by the visual system taking the presented flow pattern as a certain self-motion flow field. Here we examined the dependence of the illusory transformation on differences in depth between the two superimposed motion patterns. Presenting them with different relative binocular disparities, we found a strong variation in the magnitude of the illusory shift. Especially when translation was in front of expansion, a highly significant decrease of the illusory shift occurred, down to 25% of its magnitude at zero disparity. These findings confirm the assumption that the motion pattern is interpreted as a self-motion flow field. In a further experiment we presented monocular depth cues by changing dot size and dot density. This caused a reduction of the illusory shift which is distinctly smaller than under stereoscopic presentation. We conclude that the illusory optic flow transformation is modified by depth information, especially by binocular disparity. The findings are linked to the phenomenon of induced motion and are related to neurophysiology.

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