stereoscopy

stereoscopy
/ster'ee os"keuh pee, stear'-/, n.
1. the study of the stereoscope and its techniques.
2. three-dimensional vision.
[1860-65; STEREO- + -SCOPY]

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optics
      science and technology dealing with two-dimensional drawings or photographs that when viewed by both eyes appear to exist in three dimensions in space. A popular term for stereoscopy is 3-D. Stereoscopic pictures are produced in pairs, the members of a pair showing the same scene or object from slightly different angles that correspond to the angles of vision of the two eyes of a person looking at the object itself. Stereoscopy is possible only because of binocular vision, which requires that the left-eye view and the right-eye view of an object be perceived from different angles. In the brain the separate perceptions of the eyes are combined and interpreted in terms of depth, of different distances to points and objects seen. Stereoscopic pictures are viewed by some means that presents the right-eye image to the right eye and the left-eye image to the left. An experienced observer of stereopairs may be able to achieve the proper focus and convergence without special viewing equipment (e.g., a stereoscope); ordinarily, however, some device is used that allows each eye to see only the appropriate picture of the pair. To produce a three-dimensional effect in motion pictures (see 3-D), various systems have been employed, all involving simultaneous projection on the screen of left- and right-eye images distinguished by, for example, different colour or polarization and the use by the audience of binocular viewing filters to perceive the images properly. In holography the two eyes see two reconstructed images (light-interference patterns) as if viewing the imaged object normally, at slightly different angles.

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Universalium. 2010.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Stereoscopy — Stereoscopy, stereoscopic imaging or 3 D (three dimensional) imaging is any technique capable of recording three dimensional visual information or creating the illusion of depth in an image. The illusion of depth in a photograph, movie, or other… …   Wikipedia

  • Stereoscopy — Ste re*os co*py, n. The art or science of using the stereoscope, or of constructing the instrument or the views used with it. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • stereoscopy — [ster΄ē äs′kə pē, stir΄ē äs′kə pē] n. 1. the science of stereoscopic effects and techniques 2. the viewing of things as in three dimensions …   English World dictionary

  • stereoscopy — stereoskopija statusas T sritis fizika atitikmenys: angl. stereoscopy vok. Stereoskopie, f rus. стереоскопия, f pranc. stéréoscopie, f …   Fizikos terminų žodynas

  • stereoscopy — noun Etymology: International Scientific Vocabulary Date: circa 1859 1. a science that deals with stereoscopic effects and methods 2. the seeing of objects in three dimensions …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • stereoscopy — noun a) the manufacture and viewing of stereoscopic images; 3D imaging b) simultaneous vision using both eyes that produces a visual perception of objects located in space …   Wiktionary

  • stereoscopy — 1. An optic technique by which two images of the same object are blended into one, giving a three dimensional appearance to the single image. 2. See radiostereoscopy. * * * ste·re·os·co·py .ster ē äs kə pē, .stir ; ster ē ə .skō pē, stir n, pl… …   Medical dictionary

  • stereoscopy — ster·e·os·co·py || ‚stɪrɪ É‘skÉ™pɪ /‚sterɪ É’ n. three dimensional vision; art of creating stereoscopes and the photographs that are viewed through them …   English contemporary dictionary

  • stereoscopy — The art and science that deals with the use of binocular vision for the observation of a pair of overlapping photographs or other perspective views. It also deals with the methods by which viewing is produced …   Aviation dictionary

  • stereoscopy — stere·os·co·py …   English syllables

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