Lythgoe's visual stereophenomenon in the natural environment : a possible factor in air and highway accidents.

Author(s)
Walker, J.T.
Year
Abstract

The path of a horizontally moving object, when viewed binocularly, appears distorted in depth if a light shines in only one of the observer's eyes. The image in the lighted eye has a shorter visual latency period than the image in the other eye, and this temporal difference between image latencies translates into an apparent spatial difference between image positions which results in the apparent depth displacement of the moving object. In the natural environment, one eye can be lighted by the sun, while the other is shaded by the nose, and thus distortions may be produced in the apparent paths of traffic moving.

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Publication

Library number
B 7168 T /83.2/ IRRD 211528
Source

Human Factors, Vol. 16 (1974), No. 2 (April), p. 134-138, 2 fig., 10 ref.

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