Cyclopean image
Cyclopean image is a single mental image of a scene created by the brain by combining two images received from the two eyes. The mental process behind construction of the Cyclopean image is crucial to stereo vision. Autostereograms take advantage of this process to trick the brain into forming an apparent Cyclopean image from seemingly random patterns.
Cyclopean image is named after the mythical Cyclops with a single eye.
The term cyclopean stimuli refers to a form of visual stimuli that is defined by binocular disparity alone. It was named after the one-eyed Cyclops of Homer’s Odyssey by Bela Julesz. Julesz was a Hungarian radar engineer. He thought that stereopsis might help to discover hidden objects, this might be useful to find camouflaged objects. The important aspect of this research was that Julesz showed using random dot stereograms (RDSs) that disparity is sufficient for stereopsis, where Charles Wheatstone had only shown that binocular disparity was necessary for stereopsis. Ironically, the Cyclops would not have been able to see a cyclopean stimulus, because having only one eye, he would not have been able to perceive binocular depth cues such as binocular disparity.
References
- Julesz, B. (1971). Foundations of Cyclopean Perception. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-41527-9
- Julesz, B. (1971). Foundations of Cyclopean Perception. (2006) MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-10113-0
- Tyler, C.W. (1982). "Binocular Vision", Foundations of Clinical Ophthalmology (Chap 24)
- Pinker, S. (1997). The Mind’s Eye. In How the Mind Works (pp. 211–233) ISBN 0-393-31848-6
- Henkel, R.D. (1997). Fast Stereovision by Coherence-Detection (pp. 297–304) ISBN 978-3-540-63460-7
- Tyler, C.W. (2005). "The Riches of the Cyclopean Paradigm", Human Vision and Electronic Imaging X; 5666, (pp. 62–70)
- Wolfe, J.M., Kluender, K.R., Levi, D.M., Bartoshuk, L.M., Herz, R.S., Klatzkey, R.L., & Lederman, S.J. (2006). Space Perception and Binocular Vision., Sensation & Perception