Abstract

Through disparity in the size of ocular images, the interpretation, by means of stereoscopic vision, of the position of surfaces and planes or groups of objects taken as a whole is affected. The resulting misinterpretations are demonstrable on an instrument called the Tilting Field. Disparity in the size of ocular images, on the other hand, affects the perspective vision very slightly, if at all, and allows correct interpretation of such objects. Thus the extent to which total visual judgment is affected by false stereoscopic sense will depend upon the predominance of perspective features in the field of view. From the Department of Research in Physiological Optics, Dartmouth Medical School. Read before the American Association for Research in Ophthalmology, at Atlantic City, June 11, 1935.

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