Psychology definition for Binocular Cues in normal everyday language, edited by psychologists, professors and leading students. Help us get better.
Binocular disparity refers to the difference in the position of an image on the retinas of both eyes, particularly in the horizontal direction, providing information about the depth of an object relative to the point of fixation. AI generated definition based on: Current Opinion in Neurobiology, ...
When we track an object moving in depth, our eyes rotate in opposite directions. This type of “disjunctive” eye movement is called horizontal vergence. The sensory control signals for vergence arise from multiple visual cues, two of which, changing binocular disparity (CD) and inter-ocular vel...
Empirical evidence for an accumulative relationship has been pro- vided for stereo and relative brightness (Dosher et al., 1986), motion parallax and pictorial depth cues (Bruno & Cutting, 1988), and motion parallax and binocular dis- parity (Rogers & Collett, 1989). A veto relationship be...