Originally posted by Wired_Crawler
Nononono. Human eye is not a digital camera. It is analog \"device\". We do not see the world frame by frame, the picture is continuous.
I\'ll for sure take a look at that, but, unfortunately we don\'t process information in an analogic way, we, for sure work with frames, internally.
For instance, we don\'t notice things that are faster than our processing capacity or we see them but in a wrong way.
This conversation is getting a little of topic, but, as the server is out, we all can have some laughs.
As an example for the first, i can say:
there\'s a bird (name in english unknown for me) that moves its wings really fast, it\'s a little bird, and, when you see it, you only notice its body. You don\'t see wings, but they are there; using a camera capturing lots of frames per second allows us to view that detail when the movie is played at low motion.
Another thing is the monitor, we don\'t see it blink, but, again, use a camera and play the tape, you\'ll see how the image of the monitor refreshes.
As an example of the second, our \"eyes lying to us\", that the sentence says, i\'ll say the wheels. Yes, the wheels of the cars, given a certain speed, we can see how actually those wheels seem to twist backwards, but the car advances. The explanation comes again with the fact that we, indeed, interpret the sorrounding world with discrete variables, not analogical ones.
If we capture images every 30ms, then imagine the wheel makes a complete turn in 30ms, we won\'t see the wheel move!
Now let\'s imagine that wheel in 4 steps, guided by a known mark. The first one is label at the top, second at the right, 3d at the bottom, and 4 at the left.
Let\'s say that our capturing speed (30ms) is equal to 3/4 of the weel speed, so the wheel makes a circle every 40 ms. First capture, label is up. Second one, the wheel has covered 3/4 of the way, so we capture left. 3rd capture the wheel has covered 3/4 more so we capture down... etc. We see the wheel going backwards.
So, to sum up, i don\'t know if it\'s right at the eyes, but, what is for sure, is that at a certain step, we work with discrete signals and not continuous.
Sorry for that long post.
Edit: Used bottom two times at the wheel
