L. Matin et Wx. Li, THE INFLUENCE OF A STATIONARY SINGLE LINE IN DARKNESS ON THE VISUAL-PERCEPTION OF EYE LEVEL, Vision research, 34(3), 1994, pp. 311-330
The angle of pitch of a visual field consisting of only a single verti
cal, 64 degrees-long, eccentrically-located line in otherwise total da
rkness influences the elevation of a target set to appear at eye level
(VPEL). The influence changes linearly with the magnitude of pitch ov
er the range from -30 degrees to +20 degrees. The average slope of the
VPEL-vs-pitch function is +0.53. The influence on VPEL of a pitched v
isual field consisting of two parallel vertical lines is slightly grea
ter (slope = +0.56), and the influence of the pitch of a complexly-str
uctured well-illuminated pitched room is slightly greater yet (slope =
+0.63). The pitch of a frontoparallel plane containing one horizontal
line has a small influence on VPEL (slope= +0.08); the influence with
two horizontal lines is slightly greater (slope = +0.18). The slope o
f the VPEL-vs-pitch function differs among individual subjects but is
linear for each of the eight subjects. A great deal of consistency is
manifested by individual subjects across all of the visual fields: an
individual with a steep slope with one visual field tends to have a st
eep slope with all visual fields. The individual's characteristic resp
onse in total darkness is strongly correlated with the response to an
erect well-illuminated visual field. The significant aspect of the pit
ched-from-vertical line stimulus is the change in orientation of its r
etinal image. An additional experiment with a small pupil (pilocarpine
) indicates that cues related to other retinal gradients or to accommo
dation play no role in the influence of the visual field on VPEL. The
experiments provide support for treating the visual influence on VPEL
by means of the Great Circle Model.