Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Coraline 3d Green 3d Glasses With Turning In Of The Eye And Moving Of The Eye?

3d glasses with turning in of the eye and moving of the eye? - coraline 3d green

I have the 3D version of Coraline movie for Christmas. I have albinism and one of my eyes, and the film is unintentionally on both directions. I really do not like 3D glasses (), the red and green. Did you sit to work behind the screen? Or is my vision that problems do not work, because they do not go forward with both eyes?

2 comments:

LasikExp... said...

His nystagmus (involuntary eye movements) is certainly an impact on the clarity of a film in 3D, as affecting depth perception.

Stereo or binocular vision requires an alignment of both eyes. The dominant eye looks directly at the object, not the dominant eye is the same object at a slight angle. The brain uses the difference in each eye sees the images of these two angles to determine distance to an object. This is the essence of depth perception. Two eyes from each other by clicking on individual objects.

Three-dimensional (3D) films are how the brain decodes the depth of the projection of the image with a blue hue and a tint of red (or green), but the images are slightly separated. 3D glasses provided a filter in one eye blue and red (or green)on the other eye. Be seen through the filter of the two images with 3D glasses, which is equivalent to a reversal of the normal binocular images - the same two objects separated by an eye. The brain interprets this vision in stereo or 3D. It is "fool" the brain into the deep, because it's not really on the screen.

If nystagmus is bilaterally from - two eyes move noticeable, but the same thing - then you might be able to see in 3D, as you can see something else. When your eyes move independently of each other, the binocular vision, for the 3D effect is likely to be out of alignment enough to reduce the effect.

His albinism can change a color, which can guarantee your ability to affect seen in 3D. Studies have shown that some afare affected by albinism, an enhancement in the red end of the visible light spectrum. This change may each projected image with the color of the light that is effectively filtered, and 3D. can influence may determine whether a color change with the standard test of color blindness.

The technology seems likely that the use of red and green, most commonly in 3D-TV is likely to be incompatible with a change of color and a temporary relocation nystagmoid be raised image.

I have a partial red-green color blindness. The older technology 3D glasses with red and green, not only for me and I see that almost the same as when I had no glasses at all. The new technique seems to work much better. I saw the film with a projection DLP yt AvatarLight than the lenses of the new filter technology and can see well enough depth, but the pictures are not described as such by those who focus not affected by color blindness.

mike1942... said...

I think that is the answer to the first long misleading in several respects children.
3D glasses work by blocking a part of the image for each eye. The party is interrupted somewhat different for the right eye and left, and each represents what the eye sees, if the original object. (eg if you get a real person that can not see the right eye, the ear on the left side of the head, as is the front of the head on the road, and in contrast to his left eye.)
If you look deep insight into ordinary objects to be able to see through the glasses. In the worst case, they may close or cover one eye and see the film in 2D image omission of distraction not merge for you.
When the man said he was "red-green color blindnessand therefore the same, without glasses, that's not true. First, the color of colored lenses block, no matter what you see and the other without seeing the glasses to two images, a little has been changed to like us, but shades of gray, then we would see red and green .

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