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Cobo-Lewis, A. B. (1996). Monocular dot-density cues in
random-dot stereograms. Vision Research, 36, 345350.
In the original random-dot stereograms (RDSs) invented by Julesz, binocular disparity
could only take on values that were integral multiples of dot width. The other common
method for constructing RDSs (the projection method) relaxes this restriction.
However, the projection method can introduce dot-density cues into the monocular images.
When polar projection is employed, density variation is introduced as an expression of
perspective cues; when parallel projection is employed, there are no perspective cues, but
density variation is nonetheless introduced whenever disparity varies as a function of
horizontal position. de Vries, Kappers, and Koenderink [(1994) Vision Research, 34,
24092423] proposed to minimize the density cues by selecting half of the random dots
from a uniform random distribution in the right-eye image, projecting them into the
cyclopean surface, and then projectiong them back to the left eye image and vice versa. In
this paper the precise nature of the density cues introduced by the projection method, and
by de Vries et al.s modification of that method, are derived. It is also
shown that the projection method and its modification have very similar density cues near
the medial sagittal plane when the polar projection is employed, and that they have
identical density cues over the entire random-dot field when parallel projection is
employed.
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