Reversals of the Colour-Depth Illusion Explained by Ocular Chromatic Aberration
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文摘
Although many colour-depth phenomena are predictable from the interocular difference in monocular chromatic diplopia caused by the eye's transverse chromatic aberration (TCA), several reports in the literature suggest that other factors may also be involved. To test the adequacy of the optical model under a variety of conditions, we have determined experimentally the effects of background colour on perceived monocular chromatic diplopia and perceived depth (chromostereopsis). A Macintosh colour monitor was used to present red, blue, and green test stimuli which were viewed monocularly or binocularly (haploscopically) through 1.78 mm artificial pupils. These apertures were displaced nasally and temporally from the visual axis under controlled conditions to induce a variable degree of TCA. Monocular chromatic diplopia and binocular chromostereopsis were measured for red and blue targets, and also for red and green targets, presented on either a black background or on a background which was composed of the sum of the targets' spectral composition (e.g. red and blue presented on magenta; red and green presented on yellow). In all cases, chromatic diplopia and chromostereopsis were found experimentally to reverse in sign with this change in background. Furthermore, we found that a given coloured target could be located in different depth planes within the same display when located on different background colours. These seemingly paradoxical results could nevertheless be explained by a simple model of optical TCA without the need to postulate additional factors or mechanisms.
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