Stereoscopy

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    Is 3D Worth It?

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    Is 3D Worth It? Sarah Hannush Erik Moellering Eng 112 - YD4 10 September 2014 Category Excellent Fair Poor APA Formatting Number (4 total) & Quality of Sources (scholarly and 1 website) Annotation: Summary Annotation: Evaluation Annotation: Reflection Abstract This paper takes a look at the use of 3D in the film industry and how it affects people. Also looked at are some possible good and bad things coming from the use of 3D in movies. 3D movies are increasing in popularity and any side effects from viewing these need to be brought to light. Two different yet similar studies were reviewed about physical symptoms provoked by the act of watching a 3D movie. Take a look at the first person account from a woman who suffers from a problem with binocular vision. This paper also looks at the debate between whether or not 3D is here to stay. Keywords: Stereoscopic, stereoblind, immersion, visually induced motion sickness, optometry. Is 3D Worth It? Recently, there have been a large amount of films released in 3D, that becoming, possibly, the next big thing in film. However, the concept of 3D filming and imagery isn’t as new as people think it is. Cynthia Freeland (2012) mentions this in her brief history of 3D: “It has roots going back at least to the stereoscopic photography pioneered in the 19th century by Sir Charles Wheatstone as early as 1833” (p. 555). The first 3D film wasn’t until around 90 years after this development of…

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    Eyewitness testimonies and 3D art are alike because they both allow you to view an object from different perceptions. At a certain angle, it can appear like you’re standing on the top of an apple stem, a trophy, or on stilts. When viewing 3D pavement art people see a distinctive picture from different angles. In correlation to false memories, 3D art makes you see things that aren’t actually there. In 2018, Hill illustrated a drawing that can be perceived as a cliff in the middle of a pavement if…

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    Optics Project: 3D Movies

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    Optics Project 3D Movies How do 3D movies work? 3D movies work by adding another dimension - depth - to the motion picture Makes the audience feel like being part of the experience We perceive depth and see the world in 3D with binocular vision Binocular Vision - we see things with two eyes that are about two to three inches apart each eye sees from a slightly different perspective our brains then analyzes the differences between these two slightly different images to create a sense of depth,…

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    attained. The difficulty to objectively measure the concept of presence in virtual environments still leaves researchers considering whether participants feel as though they are entirely present. Blascovich (2002a), believes participants forget they are even in a laboratory because an IVE can be purposely created for a more veridical sense of presence. Regardless of a virtual environments realistic qualities, perhaps, participants are hesitant to behave the way they do in the physical world if…

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    Sense Perception

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    authority of the eye remained unchallenged until 19th century. It was at that point when research on physiology of the human eye and optical illusion, (afterimage effect, binocular peripheral vision…), led to the development of related devices. This optical tools, along with other socio-economical forces and ideological premises , helped to problematise the authority/reality of a stable and uniformed vision, by proving that perception was not instantaneous and could be mediated by a disjunction…

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    kinds of cues that adults use for discriminating one face from another. What are these three kinds of cues?  featural processing, spacing set, and contar set 19. In class, I described a study that compared the performance on a face-recognition task of 6-year-olds, 8-year-olds, 10-year-olds, and young adults (18-25 years). What were the results? That is, were there improvements in face recognition across this age group, and, if so, what do they suggest about the development of…

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