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Definition of Stereoscopic vision
1. Noun. Three-dimensional vision produced by the fusion of two slightly different views of a scene on each retina.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Stereoscopic Vision
Literary usage of Stereoscopic vision
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Journal by Folk-Song Society (Great Britain) (1853)
"To illustrate the effect of the stereoscopic vision, and the necessity of altering
the convergence of the optical axes for every plane of the double picture ..."
2. Textbook of human physiology by Leonard Landois, William Stirling (1889)
"Comparing these results with the stereoscopic image, we have the following laws
for stereoscopic vision: i. All those points of two stereoscopic images, ..."
3. Journal of the Royal Microscopical Society by Royal Microscopical Society, London (1882)
"stereoscopic vision with Non-stereoscopic Binocular Arrangements.—It will be
remembered that in his paper " On the Conditions of Orthoscopic and ..."
4. Harvard Psychological Studies by Harvard Psychological Laboratory (1906)
"stereoscopic vision AND THE DIFFERENCE OF RETINAL IMAGES BY GV HAMILTON THE
question which the Laboratory proposed to me for experimental enquiry was one ..."