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Originally posted by winofiend
reply to post by BayesLike
The muscles, even if it were possible, would simply cease up.
Originally posted by winofiend
reply to post by BayesLike
Also, stereopgraphic images, without glasses, can be viewed if you can cross your eyes to form the third, 3D, image in the centre. I've been able to do this since I was a kid.
edit on 10-5-2013 by winofiend because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by BayesLike
Originally posted by winofiend
reply to post by BayesLike
The muscles, even if it were possible, would simply cease up.
I completely buy the idea there is an upper limit on muscle twitches -- hearts can get up to about 300 beats a minute in fibrillation, maybe more, and sustain that for a while (not long). But that's only about 5 twitches a second, 10 alternating eyes. So, with a little reflection about the rates required, which I assume is around 30, it doesn't appear likely.
Then again, maybe 5 flutters a second per eye is enough for the image fusion to occur for still objects?
Originally posted by winofiend
This is not the same as relaxing your eyes to allow them to see the image, this is going cross eyed.. As the middle image starts to merge, suddenly it jumps out at you, and you can look within the entire image, seeing everything in complete 3D. I love these things.
Originally posted by Blue Shift
Here's another example of the cross-eye 3-D effect. I had to swap the images around from the original stereopticon card. It's the Mount Washington "UFO," which demonstrates how it is actually a folded wooden ruler in a snowbank.
Originally posted by ArMaP
reply to post by BayesLike
That image also had the images swapped. I suppose the apparatus they used to look at these inverted the images somehow, so when we look at the photos we are not seeing the effect they were supposed to show.
The swapped images look like this.