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Question of the Week / Re: QotW - 24.09.06 - What is the shutter speed of the eye?
« on: 02/09/2024 10:25:19 »
Focal Length
The human eye has a fixed focal length of around 22mm, which gives a similar field of view to a traditional film camera with a 50mm focal length.
But camera lenses come in a wide variety of focal lengths - and a camera with a zoom lens might have a range of 60:1 in focal length (and corresponding wide range in field of view).
Saccades
The human eye does not focus on just one image, but darts around parts of the image, allowing the high-resolution macula to dwell on different parts of the image for short periods of time. Saccades are the quick movements from one part of the image to another, occurring around 3-5 times per second, and lasting about 50ms each time. The brain suppresses the blurry image during the saccades, making them effectively unconscious and invisible to the viewer.
- The image collection time on one part of the retina is limited to 200-300ms, which could be considered the maximum "exposure time"
- But the brain is able to build up a detailed image across a number of saccades, forming a composite image like the popular "panorama" photo, or "stacking" in astrophotography.
An interesting comparison here... They suggest that the human eye can't see any more detail after looking at a scene for more than 10 to 15 seconds:
https://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutorials/cameras-vs-human-eye.htm
The human eye has a fixed focal length of around 22mm, which gives a similar field of view to a traditional film camera with a 50mm focal length.
But camera lenses come in a wide variety of focal lengths - and a camera with a zoom lens might have a range of 60:1 in focal length (and corresponding wide range in field of view).
Saccades
The human eye does not focus on just one image, but darts around parts of the image, allowing the high-resolution macula to dwell on different parts of the image for short periods of time. Saccades are the quick movements from one part of the image to another, occurring around 3-5 times per second, and lasting about 50ms each time. The brain suppresses the blurry image during the saccades, making them effectively unconscious and invisible to the viewer.
- The image collection time on one part of the retina is limited to 200-300ms, which could be considered the maximum "exposure time"
- But the brain is able to build up a detailed image across a number of saccades, forming a composite image like the popular "panorama" photo, or "stacking" in astrophotography.
An interesting comparison here... They suggest that the human eye can't see any more detail after looking at a scene for more than 10 to 15 seconds:
https://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutorials/cameras-vs-human-eye.htm
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