Visual representations of biological states have traditionally faced two problems: they lacked motion and depth. Attempts were made to supply these wants over many centuries, but the major advances were made in the early-nineteenth century. Motion was synthesized by sequences of slightly different images presented in rapid succession and depth was added by presenting slightly different images to each eye. Apparent motion and depth were combined some years later, but they tended to be applied separately. The major figures in this early period were Wheatstone, Plateau, Horner, Duboscq, Claudet, and Purkinje. Others later in the century, like Marey and Muybridge, were stimulated to extend the uses to which apparent motion and photography could...
Alfred Yarbus introduced a new dimension of precision in recording how the eyes moved, either when a...
Experiences following stimulation of the senses have been recorded for millennia, and they could be ...
In his original contribution, Exner's principal concern was a comparison between the properties of d...
Visual representations of biological states have traditionally faced two problems: they lacked motio...
Reading faces for identity, character, and expression is as old as humanity but representing these s...
The major challenge of photography has been freezing movement, to transform it into a fixed image or...
The understanding and tracking of human motion has been a subject of interest in the scientific comm...
The quantitative analysis of human motion identifies parameters of the observable aspect of the move...
Sensory receptors were described and illustrated after they had been observed with the aid of micros...
Spatial displays, and a constraint that they do not place on the use of spatial instruments are disc...
This article discusses the relevance of common definitions of the practice of cinematography as pres...
As Nick Wade illustrates in wonderful detail in his book on the history of visual science (1998), it...
In the early 19th century the doctrine of identical retinal points, linked with the Vieth-Müller cir...
Open Access articleThis article aims to determine to what extent photographic practices in psycholog...
The history of the expression of three-dimensional structure in art can be traced from the use of oc...
Alfred Yarbus introduced a new dimension of precision in recording how the eyes moved, either when a...
Experiences following stimulation of the senses have been recorded for millennia, and they could be ...
In his original contribution, Exner's principal concern was a comparison between the properties of d...
Visual representations of biological states have traditionally faced two problems: they lacked motio...
Reading faces for identity, character, and expression is as old as humanity but representing these s...
The major challenge of photography has been freezing movement, to transform it into a fixed image or...
The understanding and tracking of human motion has been a subject of interest in the scientific comm...
The quantitative analysis of human motion identifies parameters of the observable aspect of the move...
Sensory receptors were described and illustrated after they had been observed with the aid of micros...
Spatial displays, and a constraint that they do not place on the use of spatial instruments are disc...
This article discusses the relevance of common definitions of the practice of cinematography as pres...
As Nick Wade illustrates in wonderful detail in his book on the history of visual science (1998), it...
In the early 19th century the doctrine of identical retinal points, linked with the Vieth-Müller cir...
Open Access articleThis article aims to determine to what extent photographic practices in psycholog...
The history of the expression of three-dimensional structure in art can be traced from the use of oc...
Alfred Yarbus introduced a new dimension of precision in recording how the eyes moved, either when a...
Experiences following stimulation of the senses have been recorded for millennia, and they could be ...
In his original contribution, Exner's principal concern was a comparison between the properties of d...