Ambiguity in pictorial depth
Publication date
2007
Authors
Battu, B.
Kappers, A.M.L.
Koenderink, J.J.
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Document Type
Article
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Abstract
Pictorial space is the 3-D impression that one obtains when looking ‘into’ a 2-D
picture. One is aware of 3-D ‘opaque’ objects. ‘Pictorial reliefs’ are the surfaces of such pictorial
objects in ‘pictorial space’. Photographs (or any pictures) do in no way fully specify physical
scenes. Rather, any photograph is compatible with an infinite number of possible scenes that may
be called ‘metameric scenes’. If pictorial relief is one of these metameric scenes, the response
may be considered ‘veridical’. The conventional usage is more restrictive and is indeed inconsis-
tent. Thus the observer has much freedom in arriving at such a ‘veridical’ response. To address
this ambiguity, we determined the pictorial reliefs for eight observers, six pictures, and two
psychophysical methods. We used ‘methods of cross-sections’ to operationalise pictorial reliefs.
We find that linear regression of the depths of relief at corresponding locations in the picture for
different observers often lead to very low (even insignificant) R2s. Thus the responses are idiosyn-cratic to a large degree. Perhaps surprisingly, we also observed that multiple regression of depth
and picture coordinates at corresponding locations often lead to very high R2s. Often R2s
increased from insignificant up to almost 1. Apparently, to a large extent ‘depth’ is irrelevant as a
psychophysical variable, in the sense that it does not uniquely account for the relation of the
response to the pictorial structure. This clearly runs counter to the bulk of the literature on
pictorial ‘depth perception’. The invariant core of interindividual perception proves to be of an
‘affine’ rather than a Euclidean nature; that is to say, ‘pictorial space’ is not simply the picture
plane augmented with a depth dimension.