i-Perception (Jul 2015)

Stereo Vision: The Haves and Have-Nots

  • Robert F. Hess,
  • Long To,
  • Jiawei Zhou,
  • Guangyu Wang,
  • Jeremy R. Cooperstock

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2041669515593028
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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Animals with front facing eyes benefit from a substantial overlap in the visual fields of each eye, and devote specialized brain processes to using the horizontal spatial disparities produced as a result of viewing the same object with two laterally placed eyes, to derived depth or 3-D stereo information. This provides the advantage to break the camouflage of objects in front of similarly textured background and improves hand eye coordination for grasping objects close at hand. It is widely thought that about 5% of the population have a lazy eye and lack stereo vision, so it is often supposed that most of the population (95%) have good stereo abilities. We show that this is not the case; 68% have good to excellent stereo (the haves) and 32% have moderate to poor stereo (the have-nots). Why so many people lack good 3-D stereo vision is unclear but it is likely to be neural and reversible.