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by mbrumlow
2494 days ago
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When I was younger I remember hearing about how we can do all these things because we have 2 eyes. And that depth perception is what gives us the ability to not walk into walls, and do other things including driving. I have thought about this many times and often wondered why when closing one eye I am still able to function. Sense then I have thought strongly that having depth perception is used for training some other part of our brain, and then only used to increase accuracy of our perception of reality. Further proof of this is TV. Even on varying sized screens humans tend to do well figuring out the actual size of things displayed. |
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Some of them translate trivially to photos/TV/etc, like convergent lines or texture gradient. Some of them are surprisingly physical, like feedback from your eyes about vergence or focal distance.
Stereo is highly effective up close, say within 10 meters (yards). And it works faster than many modes. It's absolutely fantastic for catching things out of the air. Given our intraocular distance, it's basically garbage past, I dunno, 30m or something? (obviously it degrades smoothly across distance)
I've heard more than one academic (evolutionary cognitive psychologists, etc) speculate that the single biggest evolutionary advantage of having two eyes is to have a spare in the event of damage. That might well be just whimsy and exaggeration, but I think it puts a helpful alternate perspective on it (pun!).