Abstract
AbstractIn the present study, binocular vision properties were modeled using a single elementary wavelet. Opponent responses (ON-OFF) appeared in the first stages of the neural coding in the retina. This property was assumed to build an adequate wavelet showing a positive part (On) and a negative part (OFF). We have examined the experimental orientation and position disparity given by Bishop. We assumed that the theoretical position disparity was given by a combination of two wavelets for a given orientation disparity β. A change in β implied a change in the magnitude of one of the wavelets and consequently a change in the wavelets combination. There was a close match between the theoretical and experimental position disparity curves according to the changes in orientation disparity.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory