Abstract
If vertical cut-out sectors defining a Kanizsa square are given crossed disparity, the illusory figure appears in depth. Such an illusory figure can pull the background pattern inside the illusory figure to the same depth. It has been assumed that illusory contours are necessary for this phenomenon, which is called stereo capture (Ramachandran, 1986 Perception & Psychophysics
According to our results (a) depth capture also occurred without illusory contours; (b) when illusory contours were not present, the depth of the disparate rows spread more often to other areas. Usually the depth spread first to the central area of the figure and after that horizontally to other areas of the figure. Therefore, we conclude that illusory contours do not capture stereopsis—they just constrain the depth spreading.
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