1).
e
age
ords,
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ints in
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hich
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v
p.
k
point of
10nocu-
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te the
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ve may
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ly stimuli
inclusion
ss | 6, Vol.3,
imholtz noted
e line, then a
is not neces-
ust one dis-
If the
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tained if the
2).
|
the one place |
s are rotated
ction a stimulus
d convex away |
ind a configural!
A", B", C" farther from the observer and convex toward him. The three con-
figurations separately give the same impressions of straightness and position
relative to the observer. Experimental evidence in support of this conciusion is
given elsewhere [1].
It is clear from these considerations that the organism does not utilize
all the available geometric elements of the physical stimulus to form its binocular
spatial perceptions. We confine our attention to those elements alone which are
essential to perception and shall consider them as constituting the effective bin-
ocular stimulus. The principle we have enunciated is that the effective binocular
stimulus consists of those geometrical characteristics and only those which are
invariant under rotations of the separate monocular optical images about their
respective ocular centers.
We introduce special coordinates to describe these invariant characteristics.
Let P be any point of the plane and consider the circle drawn through P and the ocu-
lar centers R and L (Fig. 3). The angle y = x LP R is the angle between the visual
axes when the eyes are fixed on P. The angle y is called the convergence and is
constant for all points of the circle. Let A denote the anterior intersection of the
median line with the circle. The angle = ¥ PR A= x P L À is the mean angular
displacement (or version) of the eyes from the sagittally forward direction and is
called bipolar azimuth. The position of the point P in the plane is uniquely deter-
mined by the angles (y,9) and we introduce these angles as bipolar coordinates.
The stated binocular principle is equivalent to the assertion that in altering the co-
ordinates (y, 9) of each point P of the stimulus to values (y', P') according to the
transformation rule,
(1) y! =yv+u ÿ'=0+v
where p and v are constants, we leave the visual perception unchanged. Another
way of stating the case is that differences in convergence and bipolar azimuth (these
are invariant under the transformation rule) are the effective clues for space per-
ception.
3. THE DISTORTIONS OF THE EFFECTIVE BINOCULAR STIMULUS
PRODUCED BY BINOCULAR INSTRUMENTS AND THEIR CORRECTION.
Until we describe the visual perception itself we shall not be in a position
to describe the distortions produced by binocular instruments. Nonetheless, since
we have obtained a description of the effective binocular stimulus we already know
what needs to be done to correct that distortion: it is necessary to modify the sepa-
rate clues provided monocularly to each eye separately so as to present the same
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