stereobilds
A stereobild is an image pair designed to create the perception of three-dimensional depth when viewed with the appropriate device or technique. It encodes two slightly different images for the left and right eye, reproducing binocular disparity that the brain combines into a single 3D scene.
Common formats include stereo pairs displayed side by side or one above the other, and anaglyphs that
Historically, stereobilds emerged from 19th-century experiments in binocular vision. Charles Wheatstone introduced the stereoscope in 1838,
Production of stereobilds involves aligning two cameras to simulate interpupillary distance to control parallax, or synthesizing
Applications of stereobild technology span photography, film, medical imaging, architecture visualization, and virtual reality. In modern
Viewer safety and accessibility considerations include potential discomfort from prolonged viewing or rapid parallax changes. Content