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Showing papers on "Monocular vision published in 1969"


Journal Article
TL;DR: In this article, a T-33A aircraft with loss of binocular vision compared to performance with both eyes was used for landing in a single-person T-34A aircraft.
Abstract: Landing performance in T-33A aircraft with loss of binocular vision compared to performance with both eyes

24 citations




Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, three lights in various orientations were presented to two trained Ss. The Ss adjusted the three lights until they appeared equidistant, and the results supported earlier work of a similar nature, in that the higher light was perceived as closer and horizontal separation between lights produced no significant differences in depth settings.
Abstract: Three lights in various orientations were presented to two trained Ss. The Ss adjusted the three lights until they appeared equidistant. The results supported earlier work of a similar nature, in that the higher light was perceived as closer and horizontal separation between lights produced no significant differences in depth settings. The phenomenon was shown to occur with monocular vision, fixated vision, large angular separation of the stimuli, and with different directions of regard with respect to the fixation point. The relationship to other research is discussed.

3 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comparison of the effectiveness of binocular and monocular clues is made and it is found that the former is more effective than the latter in terms of improving driving performance.
Abstract: BY TESTING DRIVING PERFORMANCE UNDER BINOCULAR VIEWING CONDITIONS AND UNDER MONOCULAR VIEWING CONDITIONS, THE AUTHORS MAKE A COMPARISON OF THE EFFECTIVENESS OF BINOCULAR AND MONOCULAR CLUES. /AUTHOR/

1 citations