| Literature DB >> 30963917 |
Wendy J Adams1, Erich W Graf1, Matt Anderson1.
Abstract
Many species employ camouflage to disguise their true shape and avoid detection or recognition. Disruptive coloration is a form of camouflage in which high-contrast patterns obscure internal features or break up an animal's outline. In particular, edge enhancement creates illusory, or 'fake' depth edges within the animal's body. Disruptive coloration often co-occurs with background matching, and together, these strategies make it difficult for an observer to visually segment an animal from its background. However, stereoscopic vision could provide a critical advantage in the arms race between perception and camouflage: the depth information provided by binocular disparities reveals the true three-dimensional layout of a scene, and might, therefore, help an observer to overcome the effects of disruptive coloration. Human observers located snake targets embedded in leafy backgrounds. We analysed performance (response time) as a function of edge enhancement, illumination conditions and the availability of binocular depth cues. We confirm that edge enhancement contributes to effective camouflage: observers were slower to find snakes whose patterning contains 'fake' depth edges. Importantly, however, this effect disappeared when binocular depth cues were available. Illumination also affected detection: under directional illumination, where both the leaves and snake produced strong cast shadows, snake targets were localized more quickly than in scenes rendered under ambient illumination. In summary, we show that illusory depth edges, created via disruptive coloration, help to conceal targets from human observers. However, cast shadows and binocular depth information improve detection by providing information about the true three-dimensional structure of a scene. Importantly, the strong interaction between disparity and edge enhancement suggests that stereoscopic vision has a critical role in breaking camouflage, enabling the observer to overcome the disruptive effects of edge enhancement.Entities:
Keywords: binocular disparity; camouflage; depth; disruptive coloration; human; visual perception
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30963917 PMCID: PMC6408597 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2018.2045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349
Figure 1.Camouflaged snakes. (a) The patterns on the copperhead snake illustrate both edge enhancement and background matching. In natural scenes, humans must discriminate depth edges at object boundaries (left close-up) from edges owing to other causes such as a change in reflectance (right close-up), or a shadow boundary. Image by Judy Gallagher, under licence: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed.en. (b) Example stimuli. A single snake target was presented on each trial and observers reported its location (one of four quadrants). The four disc close-ups show example targets with or without edge enhancement (rows), in scenes under ambient or directional illumination (columns). (c) Generation of snake textures. (i) Random-dot noise patterns were low-pass filtered to create (ii) blobby greyscale patterns. (iii) These patterns were thresholded to create binary maps. Colours from forest scenes within the SYNS dataset [1] were applied to these binary pattern maps, to create snake textures without edge enhancement. (iv) The edge enhancement pattern comprised a linear luminance gradient on each side of the pattern's edges. This enhancement pattern was combined with the base texture (iii) to create (v) the edge-enhanced snake texture. See Methods: Stimuli for more details.
Figure 2.Classic visual search displays used to investigate the effects of binocular disparity. Panels (a,b) can be cross-fused to identify the target that is stereoscopically in front of the distractors. (c) The same stimulus layout, presented as an anaglyph, for viewing with red-green glasses.
Figure 3.Results. (a) RTs for snake localization as a function of viewing condition and edge enhancement. (b) RTs as a function of illumination condition and viewing condition. Error bars give ±1 s.e. *** indicates p < 0.001 from ANOVA main effects and simple effects t-tests, as described in the text. (Online version in colour.)