Impossible objects as nonsense sentences
–Classics/files/AI/classics/Machine Intelligence 6/MI6-Ch19-Huffman.pdf
To every 3-dimensional scene there correspond as many 2-dimensional pictures as there are possible vantage points for the camera. It is, however, possible to construct pictures for which there is no corresponding scene containing physically -realizable objects. Pictures of such'impossible objects' can be useful in giving insight into the constraints or grammatical rules associated with the'language' of pictures, just as nonsense sentences can be useful in illustrating the rules of other languages. Impossible objects have been used by psychologists (Penrose and Penrose 1958) to create visual illusions which successfully challenge the ability of our perceptual systems to synthesize a 3-dimensional world from 2-dimensional information. The incompatibilities among the various portions of pictures of these objects are a novel way of testing our picture analysis procedures. The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate some possible decision procedures and to test them on pictures of both possible and impossible objects.
Feb-1-1971