Stereoscopic motion (original) (raw)
Stereoscopic motion, as introduced by Béla Julesz in his book Foundations of Cyclopean Perception of 1971, is a translational motion of figure boundaries defined by changes in binocular disparity over time in a real-life 3D scene, a 3D film or other stereoscopic scene. This translational motion gives rise to a mental representation of three dimensional motion created in the brain on the basis of the binocular motion stimuli. Whereas the motion stimuli as presented to the eyes have a different direction for each eye, the stereoscopic motion is perceived as yet another direction on the basis of the views of both eyes taken together. Stereoscopic motion, as it is perceived by the brain, is also referred to as cyclopean motion, and the processing of visual input that takes place in the visual
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dbo:abstract | Stereoscopic motion, as introduced by Béla Julesz in his book Foundations of Cyclopean Perception of 1971, is a translational motion of figure boundaries defined by changes in binocular disparity over time in a real-life 3D scene, a 3D film or other stereoscopic scene. This translational motion gives rise to a mental representation of three dimensional motion created in the brain on the basis of the binocular motion stimuli. Whereas the motion stimuli as presented to the eyes have a different direction for each eye, the stereoscopic motion is perceived as yet another direction on the basis of the views of both eyes taken together. Stereoscopic motion, as it is perceived by the brain, is also referred to as cyclopean motion, and the processing of visual input that takes place in the visual system relating to stereoscopic motion is called stereoscopic motion processing. Provided the binocular motion stimuli correspond to a physical object moving in 3D space, the stereoscopic motion closely represents its actual motion. Alternatively, the images with the binocular motion stimuli can be artificially created, for instance using dynamic random dot stereograms. Cyclopean (stereoscopic) motion and cyclopean images are aspects of so-called cyclopean vision – named after the mythical giant Cyclops who had only one eye – involving a mental representation of objects in space as if they were perceived in full depth and from a position of a "cyclopean eye" situated approximately between the two eyes. By definition, individuals who have only monocular vision do not perform stereoscopic motion processing. They rely instead on monocular depth cues to perceive motion in space (see also: kinetic depth effect). (en) |
dbo:wikiPageID | 43971138 (xsd:integer) |
dbo:wikiPageLength | 8079 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger) |
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID | 1080977152 (xsd:integer) |
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink | dbr:Cyclopean_image dbr:Mental_image dbr:Physical_object dbr:Brain dbr:Stereopsis dbr:Visual_space dbr:Three-dimensional_space dbr:Head-mounted_display dbr:Optical_flow dbr:Vision_science dbr:Motion_(physics) dbr:3D_film dbc:Stereoscopy dbr:Cyclops dbr:Foundations_of_Cyclopean_Perception dbr:Kinetic_depth_effect dbr:Random_dot_stereogram dbc:Visual_perception dbc:Vision dbr:Binocular_disparity dbr:Binocular_vision dbr:Béla_Julesz dbr:Vergence dbr:Virtual_reality dbr:Motion_aftereffect dbr:Motion_perception dbr:Monocular_depth_cues dbr:Stereoblind |
dbp:date | December 2014 (en) |
dbp:reason | Looks like this was written by a student - references should be cleaned up . (en) |
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate | dbt:About dbt:Cleanup dbt:Reflist dbt:Mental_processes dbt:Stereoscopy |
dct:subject | dbc:Stereoscopy dbc:Visual_perception dbc:Vision |
gold:hypernym | dbr:Motion |
rdf:type | dbo:Work |
rdfs:comment | Stereoscopic motion, as introduced by Béla Julesz in his book Foundations of Cyclopean Perception of 1971, is a translational motion of figure boundaries defined by changes in binocular disparity over time in a real-life 3D scene, a 3D film or other stereoscopic scene. This translational motion gives rise to a mental representation of three dimensional motion created in the brain on the basis of the binocular motion stimuli. Whereas the motion stimuli as presented to the eyes have a different direction for each eye, the stereoscopic motion is perceived as yet another direction on the basis of the views of both eyes taken together. Stereoscopic motion, as it is perceived by the brain, is also referred to as cyclopean motion, and the processing of visual input that takes place in the visual (en) |
rdfs:label | Stereoscopic motion (en) |
owl:sameAs | freebase:Stereoscopic motion wikidata:Stereoscopic motion https://global.dbpedia.org/id/mYPB |
prov:wasDerivedFrom | wikipedia-en:Stereoscopic_motion?oldid=1080977152&ns=0 |
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf | wikipedia-en:Stereoscopic_motion |
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of | dbr:Stereoblindness dbr:Stereopsis dbr:Random_dot_stereogram |
is foaf:primaryTopic of | wikipedia-en:Stereoscopic_motion |