Quote:
Original post by Prune
Quote:
Original post by cowsarenotevil
your claim is that your eyes will adapt to the simulated version but for some reason won't correctly adapt back to real life, but you don't provide any justification for this.
As I pointed out in another reply, if they always fully adapted, then the eye exercises treatment for strabismus would not work. However, it does work, even in adults. QED
Well, no, because for one thing it's obvious that the treatment doesn't work nearly as well in adults from your own links, and the end result of treatment is a convergence of eyes that is, you know,
correct, which is probably one of the principle reasons why the treatment lasts (because from then on depth perception actually works better). As pretty much everyone else in the thread except for you has already said, there is no reason your eyes should permanently adapt to the incorrect signals from the 3D displays because quite frankly it isn't that similar to the strabismus treatments that sometimes work in adults.
Quote:
You are so very wrong that I don't know where to begin.
In fact, it is a concern. Dark (resting) vergence is a common research topic in optometry. Also, see here: Primary Care Optometry, p.310
And in there note the following:
Quote:
Fortunately, the effects due to increased (or decreased) accommodation often combine with the effects due to the lack of induced prism by decentration to cause the fusuional vergence demand to change little.
In other words, the eye is close enough to the lens that there is an induced prism effect (since we are dealing with a real lens that has thickness, not the idealized thin lens from highschool optics) that counteracts the change in convergence.
Seriously, do you think I'm stupid to have made this thread without doing my research?
So what you're saying is that
often the change is
little in corrective lenses that people wear
all the time. And, like I said, the actual change is constant, which is much more consistent with the treatments you keep flailing on about. On the other hand, these 3D displays, which people only use sometimes and have a mismatch between angle and focus that is
not constant, are similar enough that you have
proven that the displays are a health hazard.
At this point it looks like you've done a lot of reading, a little bit of thinking, then immediately tried to start a health scare. Cool.
I'll let you continue to smugly say absolutely nothing with someone else before you give me a real health problem like high blood pressure.