Comment on Anon fixes their games
dustyData@lemmy.world 3 weeks agoNo, they don’t. As there is no shutter in a continuous parallel neural stream. But, if you have any research paper that says so, go ahead and share.
Comment on Anon fixes their games
dustyData@lemmy.world 3 weeks agoNo, they don’t. As there is no shutter in a continuous parallel neural stream. But, if you have any research paper that says so, go ahead and share.
Aux@feddit.uk 3 weeks ago
It has nothing to do with a neutral stream, it’s basic physics.
dustyData@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
Explain, don’t just antagonize. I bet you don’t understand the basic physics either. I’m open to learn new things. What is the eye’s shutter speed? sustain your claim with sources.
Aux@feddit.uk 2 weeks ago
I put “shutter speed” in quotes for a reason. To gather the required amount of light, the sensor must be exposed to it for a specific amount of time. When it’s dark, the time increases. It doesn’t matter if it’s a camera or your eye.
dustyData@lemmy.world 2 weeks ago
That’s sensitivity, not shutter speed. Eye’s do not require time for exposure, but a quanta or intensity of light. This sensitivity is variable, but not in a time dilated way. Notice that you don’t see blurrier in darker conditions, unlike a camera. You do see in duller colors, as a result of higher engagement of rods instead of cones. The first are more sensitive but less dense in the fovea, and not sensitive to color. While a camera remains as colorful but more prone to motion blur. This is because the brain does not take individual frames of time to process a single still and particular image. The brain analyses the signals from the eye continuously, dynamically and in parallel from each individual sensor, cone is rod.
In other words, eye’s still don’t have, even a figurative, shutter speed.