Development of Three-Dimensional Perception in Human Infants
- PMID: 28532379
- DOI: 10.1146/annurev-vision-082114-035835
Development of Three-Dimensional Perception in Human Infants
Abstract
The play of light on the retina contains multiple sources of information about the three-dimensional (3D) structure of the world. Some of the best information is derived from differencing operations that act on the images that result from the two eyes' laterally displaced vantage points. Other information is available in systematic retinal patterns of local texture and motion cues. This article describes what is currently known about the development of sensitivity to these binocular and monocular cues for depth in human infants, and it places the results in the context of what is known about the underlying neural mechanisms from work in nonhuman primates and human neuroimaging studies.
Keywords: binocular summation; depth perception; disparity; motion parallax; stereopsis.