“A Special-Purpose Computer System for On-Line Generation and Display of “Random-Dot” Stimuli for Stereoscopic Vision Experiments” by Wyatt and Ellis

  • ©Harry J. Wyatt and Robert A. Ellis

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Title:

    A Special-Purpose Computer System for On-Line Generation and Display of "Random-Dot" Stimuli for Stereoscopic Vision Experiments

Session/Category Title:   Biomedical Computing Session


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Abstract:


    There are a number of ways in which we can tell, visually, the absolute or relative distances of objects from us. The most important way is stereopsis: in stereopsis, the brain interprets the slight differences between the views of the world through the left and right eyes to reveal the relative distances of objects in the field of view.

References:


    1. Julesz, B., Foundations of Cyclopean Perception, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1971.
    2. Clark, W. A., and Molnar, C. E., “Macromodular Computer Systems”, In Computers in Biomedical Research, edited by R. R. Stacy and B. R. Waxman, Academic Press, New York, 1974, Vol. 4, p 45.
    3. Franklin, M., and Sadeh, E., “A Macromodule Shift Register Random Number Generator”, Technical Memorandum 159, Computer Systems Laboratory, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, May 1972.


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