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Binocular Disparity points nearer than horopter have crossed disparity
points farther than horopter have uncrossed disparity The Horopter
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Binocular Disparity Why don’t we see double vision?
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Binocular Disparity Why don’t we see double vision?
Images with a small enough disparity are fused into a single image
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Binocular Disparity Why don’t we see double vision?
Images with a small enough disparity are fused into a single image The region of space that contains images with close enough disparity to be fused is called Panum’s Area
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Binocular Disparity Panum’s Area extends just in front of and just behind the horopter
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Binocular Disparity Panum’s Area extends just in front of and just behind the horopter Images outside of Panum’s area are often blurry because accommodation is reflexively set according to vergence
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Stereopsis Our brains interpret crossed and uncrossed disparity as depth That process is called stereoscopic depth perception or simply stereopsis
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Stereopsis Stereopsis requires that the brain can encode the two retinal images independently
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Stereopsis Primary Visual cortex normally keeps input from the eyes separate If normal input is restricted during development, the cortical representation of the “bad” eye is reduced Amblyopia can result
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Amblyopia Amblyopia is a visual deficit in which one eye has poor vision because the brain never developed the ability to use signals from that retina
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Amblyopia Amblyopia is a visual deficit in which one eye has poor vision because the brain never developed the ability to use signals from that retina Usually caused by strabismus - when eyes don’t lock onto the same point anisometropia - when one eye has very bad optics and the other is normal
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Amblyopia People with Amblyopia can’t see stereograms
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Stereograms seeing depth requires “only” two different images on the retina
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Stereograms seeing depth requires “only” two different images on the retina this could be accomplished by an optical device that projects separate images into the two eyes
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Presenting Binocular Images
Various ways to add depth: 1. Stereoscope
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Stereograms Divider Left Eye Right Eye
Right eye sees face to the right; left eye sees face to the left therefore: uncrossed disparity Face appears behind the square
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Stereograms Divider Left Eye Right Eye What would you see?
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Stereograms Divider Left Eye Right Eye
Right eye sees face to the left; left eye sees face to the right therefore: crossed disparity Face appears in front of square
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Presenting Binocular Images
Various ways to add depth: glasses with different lenses
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Presenting Binocular Images
Various ways to add depth: glasses with different lenses
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Presenting Binocular Images
Various ways to add depth: glasses with different lenses
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Presenting Binocular Images
Various ways to add depth: LCD Shutter Glasses
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Gregory
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Science Make a Hypothesis Identify a question Make a Prediction
Science is like a set of procedures: Make a Hypothesis Identify a question Make a Prediction Prediction Fails Prediction holds Test It
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Example: The horizontal-vertical illusion
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Example: The horizontal-vertical illusion
Question:
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Example: The horizontal-vertical illusion
Question: Why does the vertical line seem longer? Hypothesis:
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Example: The horizontal-vertical illusion
Question: Why does the vertical line seem longer? Hypothesis: Wundt -> vertical and horizontal eye movements scan the image differently Prediction:
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Example: The horizontal-vertical illusion
Question: Why does the vertical line seem longer? Hypothesis: Wundt -> vertical and horizontal eye movements scan the image differently Prediction: Stabilized image should eliminate the illusion Test:
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Example: The horizontal-vertical illusion
Question: Why does the vertical line seem longer? Hypothesis: Wundt -> vertical and horizontal eye movements scan the image differently Prediction: Stabilized image should eliminate the illusion Test: Illusion is still present in afterimage!
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