The analysis of ocular dominance and patient specific interocular suppression and binocular rivalry also allows for ensuring the eyes can work together to create the Laser Blended Vision effect.
12.
Thirdly, decreasing the contrast of the stimulus to be suppressed increases the duration of motion-induced interocular suppression, but decreases the duration of motion-induced blindness.
13.
However, it is possible by backing off from the subject and using the 3X optical zoom to compensate for the wide interocular and take some decent closeup stereo shots.
14.
The Hollows Foundation on Friday voiced its frustration over a three-year bureaucratic delay in getting approval to build an interocular lens factory in Vietnam to help a million cataract sufferers.
15.
There are 9-14 interocular scales across the top of the head and 14-21 circumorbital scales . 1-3 rows of scales separate the eye from the supralabials.
16.
The interocular remained at 15mm, of course, so the magnification given by the + 10 lens resulted in excessive parallax, and many people found the pictures produced by it difficult to view.
17.
A 3D adaptor is available for this camcorder, the VW-CLT1 though the 3D effect is rather poor because the distance between the lenses is substantially less than the interocular distance of the eyes.
18.
In the 1980s, a medical group that patented a penile injection method to treat impotence sued several makers of drugs used with the treatment, and an eye surgeon who patented a method of implanting interocular lenses sued several lens manufacturers.
19.
Motion-induced interocular suppression is fundamentally different from motion induced blindness : firstly, the latter is due to the interaction of moving and stationary fovea, whereas motion-induced blindness requires the stimulus to be small and peripherally located.
20.
Technical requirements of macro work related to the interocular distance of 15mm dictated that the subject be a certain distance from the camera so a pair of " arms " located in front of the lens showed where the subject needed to be.