Volume 7, Number 14, Article 10, Pages 1-11 doi:10.1167/7.14.10 http://journalofvision.org/7/14/10/ ISSN 1534-7362
The wallpaper illusion explained
Suzanne P. McKee
Smith-Kettlewell Eye Research Institute, San Francisco, CA, USA
[e-mail]
Preeti Verghese
Smith-Kettlewell Eye Research Institute, San Francisco, CA, USA
[e-mail]
Anna Ma-Wyatt
School of Psychology, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia
[e-mail]
Yury Petrov
Department of Psychology, Northeastern University, Boston, MA, USA
[e-mail]
Abstract

In the wallpaper illusion, a repetitive pattern appears to shift from one depth plane to the plane nearest fixation. We measured the timing of this shift for a 6° wide, 3-cpd sinusoidal grating presented in a rectangular envelope; the edges (envelope) of the grating were presented at 20 arcmin of disparity (one period) behind the fixation plane. We asked observers to signal when the segment appeared to move from the edge plane forward to the fixation plane. Initially, the shift from the edge plane took 4–6 s, but after many trials, the shift became faster. Additional experiments demonstrated that the envelope was adapting, thereby permitting the alternative match. Our measurements for a range of spatial frequencies and disparities showed that these shifts to the fixation plane occurred only if the envelope disparity was more than one-half period of the carrier; that is, phase disparity >180°. We also found that stereoacuity for the initial envelope-based match was poor, as might be expected for a target presented far off the fixation plane. However, once the perceived shift in depth occurred, stereoacuity improved fivefold without any change in the physical stimulus. We speculate that access to the most sensitive V1 neurons depends on the extrastriate processes that determine perceived depth—in this case, second-order envelope mechanisms.

View full-text

History
Received February 7, 2007; published December 11, 2007
Citation
McKee, S. P., Verghese, P., Ma-Wyatt, A., & Petrov, Y. (2007). The wallpaper illusion explained. Journal of Vision, 7(14):10, 1-11, http://journalofvision.org/7/14/10/, doi:10.1167/7.14.10.
Keywords
binocular vision, stereopsis, stereo matching, stereoacuity
Downloads
205 Total.
 
Search
for related articles by these authors
for papers that cite this paper
Get citation






jov