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      Natural Perspective: Mapping Visual Space with Art and Science

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          Abstract

          Following its discovery in fifteenth-century Italy, linear perspective has often been hailed as the most accurate method of projecting three-dimensional visual space onto a two-dimensional picture plane. However, when we survey the history of European art it is evident that few artists fully complied with its mathematical rules, despite many of them being rigorously trained in its procedures. In this paper, we will consider how artists have actually depicted visual space, and present evidence that images created according to a “natural” perspective (NP) used by artists are judged as better representations of visual space than those created using standard linear (LP) and curvilinear fisheye (FP) projective geometries. In this study, we built a real three-dimensional scene and produced photographs of the scene in three different perspectives (NP, LP and FP). An online experiment in which we asked people to rank the perspectives in order of preference showed a clear preference for NP compared to the FP and LP. In a second experiment, participants were asked to view the real scene and rate each perspective on a range of psychological variables. Results showed that NP was the most preferred and the most effective in depicting the physical space naturally. We discuss the implications of these results and the advantages and limitations of our approach for studying the global metric and geometrical structure of visual space.

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          Effects of Perceptual Fluency on Affective Judgments

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            A Cross-Media Presence Questionnaire: The ITC-Sense of Presence Inventory

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              Peripheral vision and pattern recognition: a review.

              We summarize the various strands of research on peripheral vision and relate them to theories of form perception. After a historical overview, we describe quantifications of the cortical magnification hypothesis, including an extension of Schwartz's cortical mapping function. The merits of this concept are considered across a wide range of psychophysical tasks, followed by a discussion of its limitations and the need for non-spatial scaling. We also review the eccentricity dependence of other low-level functions including reaction time, temporal resolution, and spatial summation, as well as perimetric methods. A central topic is then the recognition of characters in peripheral vision, both at low and high levels of contrast, and the impact of surrounding contours known as crowding. We demonstrate how Bouma's law, specifying the critical distance for the onset of crowding, can be stated in terms of the retinocortical mapping. The recognition of more complex stimuli, like textures, faces, and scenes, reveals a substantial impact of mid-level vision and cognitive factors. We further consider eccentricity-dependent limitations of learning, both at the level of perceptual learning and pattern category learning. Generic limitations of extrafoveal vision are observed for the latter in categorization tasks involving multiple stimulus classes. Finally, models of peripheral form vision are discussed. We report that peripheral vision is limited with regard to pattern categorization by a distinctly lower representational complexity and processing speed. Taken together, the limitations of cognitive processing in peripheral vision appear to be as significant as those imposed on low-level functions and by way of crowding. © ARVO
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Vision (Basel)
                Vision (Basel)
                vision
                Vision
                MDPI
                2411-5150
                07 May 2018
                June 2018
                : 2
                : 2
                : 21
                Affiliations
                Fovolab, Cardiff School of Art, Cardiff Metropolitan University, Cardiff CF5 2YB, UK
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: rpepperell@ 123456cardiffmet.ac.uk ; Tel.: +44-29-2041-6666
                Article
                vision-02-00021
                10.3390/vision2020021
                6835594
                31735885
                4497b2f0-b748-4a0f-ac58-2ed4667b2fea
                © 2018 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 15 March 2018
                : 01 May 2018
                Categories
                Article

                art,visual space,perspective,natural perspective,geometrical perspective,peripheral visual field

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