Specular motion and 3D shape estimation
Date
2017Source Title
Journal of Vision
Print ISSN
1534-7362
Publisher
Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology Inc.
Volume
17
Issue
6
Pages
1 - 15
Language
English
Type
ArticleItem Usage Stats
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Abstract
Dynamic visual information facilitates three-dimensional shape recognition. It is still unclear, however, whether the motion information generated by moving specularities across a surface is congruent to that available from optic flow produced by a matte-textured shape. Whereas the latter is directly linked to the firstorder properties of the shape and its motion relative to the observer, the specular flow, the image flow generated by a specular object, is less sensitive to the object's motion and is tightly related to second-order properties of the shape. We therefore hypothesize that the perceived bumpiness (a perceptual attribute related to curvature magnitude) is more stable to changes in the type of motion in specular objects compared with their matte-textured counterparts. Results from two twointerval forced-choice experiments in which observers judged the perceived bumpiness of perturbed spherelike objects support this idea and provide an additional layer of evidence for the capacity of the visual system to exploit image information for shape inference. © 2017 The Authors.
Keywords
Shape from specular flowStructure from motion
Surface reflectance and 3D shape
Movement perception
Optic flow
Pattern recognition
Three dimensional imaging
Form perception
Humans
Motion perception
Optic flow