3. Exercise
• Look around and find 3 different objects
• 1 very close
• 1 a long way away
• 1 somewhere in between
• How did you do that?
4. Depth perception
• The only way we could have done that
exercise is by using depth cues
• This means we look at how deep into a scene
an object appears to be
5. Depth Perception
How do we
know that the
car is closer than
the house?
How do we
know that the
grey car is closer
than the black
car?
6. Depth cues
• Depth cues are those things that tell us how
‘deep’ into a scene something is
• There are 2 kinds of depth cues
• Monocular- these can be seen using only one
eye
• Binocular- you need to use 2 eyes to
understand these
7. Monocular depth cues
• Superimposition
• Relative Size
• Texture gradient
• Linear perspective
• Height in the plane
8. Superimposition
How do we
know that the
car is in front of
the garage?
Draw a picture
in your book to
illustrate
superimposition
9. Relative Size
Closer objects are
larger in the visual
field. Same sized
objects that are
further away appear
to be smaller even
though we know that
they are not
Draw a picture in
your book to
illustrate relative size
10. Texture Gradient
Close objects
appear in great
detail, but the
detail gets less clear
the further away an
object is.
If you lie on a
carpet, the fibres
close to you are
very clear, but the
ones at the other
side of the room
are not.
Draw a picture …