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Binocular vision



 
 
Binocular vision is vision
Visual perception

Visual perception is the ability to interpret information from visible light reaching the eye. The resulting perception is also known as eyesight, sight or vision....
 in which both eye
Eye

Eyes are Organ that detect light, and send signals along the optic nerve to the visual system and other areas of the brain. Complex optical systems with resolving power have come in ten fundamentally different forms, and 96% of animal species possess a complex optical system....
s are used together. The word binocular comes from two Latin
Latin

Latin is an Italic language, historically spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Through the Military history of the Roman Empire, Latin spread throughout the Mediterranean and a large part of Europe....
 roots, bini for double, and oculus for eye.

Having two eyes confers at least four advantages over having one. First, it gives a creature a spare eye in case one is damaged. Second, it gives a wider field of view
Field of view

The field of view is the angle extent of the observable world that is visual perception at any given moment.The range of visual abilities is not uniform across a field of view, and varies from animal to animal....
. For example, a human has a horizontal field of view of approximately 200 degrees with two eyes but only 160 degrees with one..






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Binocular vision is vision
Visual perception

Visual perception is the ability to interpret information from visible light reaching the eye. The resulting perception is also known as eyesight, sight or vision....
 in which both eye
Eye

Eyes are Organ that detect light, and send signals along the optic nerve to the visual system and other areas of the brain. Complex optical systems with resolving power have come in ten fundamentally different forms, and 96% of animal species possess a complex optical system....
s are used together. The word binocular comes from two Latin
Latin

Latin is an Italic language, historically spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Through the Military history of the Roman Empire, Latin spread throughout the Mediterranean and a large part of Europe....
 roots, bini for double, and oculus for eye.

Having two eyes confers at least four advantages over having one. First, it gives a creature a spare eye in case one is damaged. Second, it gives a wider field of view
Field of view

The field of view is the angle extent of the observable world that is visual perception at any given moment.The range of visual abilities is not uniform across a field of view, and varies from animal to animal....
. For example, a human has a horizontal field of view of approximately 200 degrees with two eyes but only 160 degrees with one.. Third, it gives binocular summation in which the ability to detect faint objects is enhanced.

Fourth it can give stereopsis
Stereopsis

Stereopsis is the process in visual perception leading to the sensation of depth from the two slightly different projections of the world onto the retinas of the two eyes....
 in which parallax
Parallax

Parallax is an apparent displacement or difference of orientation of an object viewed along two different lines of sight, and is measured by the angle or semi-angle of inclination between those two lines....
 provided by the two eyes' different positions on the head give precise depth perception
Depth perception

Depth perception is the visual perception ability to perceive the world in three dimensions. Although any animal capable of moving around its environment must be able to sense the distance of objects in that environment, the term perception is reserved for humans, who are the only beings that can tell each other about their qualia of dist...
.

Such binocular vision is usually accompanied by singleness of vision or binocular fusion, in which a single image is seen despite each eye's having its own image of any object. Other phenomena of binocular vision include utrocular discrimination, eye dominance
Ocular dominance

Ocular dominance, sometimes called eye dominance or eyedness, is the tendency to prefer visual perception input from one eye to the other....
, allelotropia, and binocular rivalry
Binocular rivalry

Binocular rivalry is a phenomenon of visual perception in which perception alternates between different images presented to each eye.When one image is presented to one eye and a very different image is presented to the other, instead of the two images being seen superimposed, one image is seen for a few moments, then the other, then the fir...
.

Field of view and eye movements


Some animals, usually prey animals, have their two eyes positioned on opposite sides of their heads to give the widest possible field of view
Field of view

The field of view is the angle extent of the observable world that is visual perception at any given moment.The range of visual abilities is not uniform across a field of view, and varies from animal to animal....
. Examples include rabbit
Rabbit

Rabbits are small mammals in the family Leporidae of the order Lagomorpha, found in several parts of the world. There are seven different genus in the family taxonomy as rabbits, including the European rabbit , Cottontail rabbit , and the Amami rabbit ....
s, buffalo
Bubalus

Bubalus is a genus of bovines, whose English name is buffalo. Species that belong to this genus are:* Subgenus Bubalus** Water Buffalo, Bubalus bubalis...
es, and antelope
Antelope

Antelope are ruminant hoofed mammals of the family Bovidae in the order of even-toed ungulates. These animals are spread relatively evenly throughout the various subfamily of Bovidae and many are more closely related to cows or goats than to each other....
s. In such animals, the eyes often move independently to increase the field of view. Even without moving their eyes, some birds have a 360-degree field of view.

Other animals, usually predatory animals, have their two eyes positioned on the front of their heads, thereby allowing for binocular vision and reducing their field of view in favour of stereopsis
Stereopsis

Stereopsis is the process in visual perception leading to the sensation of depth from the two slightly different projections of the world onto the retinas of the two eyes....
. Examples include eagle
Eagle

Eagles are large bird of prey which are members of the bird family Accipitridae, and belong to several Genus which are not necessarily closely related to each other....
s, cat
Cat

The cat , also known as the Domestication cat or house cat to distinguish it from other Felinae and Felidae, is a small predationy carnivore species of crepuscular mammal that is valued by humans for its companionship and its ability to hunt vermin, snakes, scorpions, and other unwanted household pests....
s, and snake
Snake

Snakes are elongate legless carnivore reptiles of the suborder Serpentes that can be distinguished from legless lizards by their lack of eyelids and external ears....
s.

Some predator animals, particularly large ones such as sperm whale
Sperm Whale

The Sperm Whale is the largest of all toothed whales and largest living toothed animal. The whale was named after the milky-white waxy substance, spermaceti, found in its head and originally mistaken for sperm or semen....
s and killer whales, have their two eyes positioned on opposite sides of their heads. Other animals that are not necessarily predators, such as fruit bat
Fruit Bat

Fruit Bat can refer to:* Megabats, species of bats which eat fruit.* Fruitbat, a British musician.* Fruit Bats, an American band....
s and some primate
Primate

A primate is a member of the biological order Primates , the group that contains lemurs, the Aye-aye, Lorisidaes, galagos, tarsiers, monkeys, and apes, with the last category including humans....
s also have forward facing eyes. These are usually animals that need fine depth discrimination/perception; for instance, binocular vision improves the ability to pick a chosen fruit or to find and grasp a particular branch.

In animals with forward-facing eyes, the eyes usually move together.

When the eyes move laterally, in the same direction, this is called a version
Version (eye)

A version is an eye movement involving both eyes moving synchronously and symmetrically in the same direction.#Dextroversion / right gaze#Laevoversion / left gaze...
. When the eyes move in opposite directions, to an object closer than where the eyes are pointing or farther than where the eyes are pointing, this is called a vergence
Vergence

A vergence is the simultaneous movement of both eyes in opposite directions to obtain or maintain single binocular vision..When a creature with binocular vision looks at an object, the eyes must rotate around a vertical axis so that the projection of the image is in the centre of the retina in both eyes....
. When the eyes move in, it is a convergence
Convergence

In the absence of a more specific context, convergence denotes the approach toward a definite value, as time goes on; or to a definite point, a common view or opinion, or toward a fixed or equilibrium point state....
 eye movement
Eye movement

Eye movement may refer to:* Eye movement , the voluntary or involuntary movement of the eyes* Eye movement in reading, the method in which eye movement assimilates written language...
; when the eyes move out, it is a divergence
Divergence

In vector calculus, the divergence is an operator that measures the magnitude of a vector field's source or sink at a given point; the divergence of a vector field is a scalar....
 eye movement.

Some animals (including some humans, notably exotropes) use both of the above strategies. A starling
Starling

Starlings are found around the World, from Europe, Asia and Africa, to northern Australia and the islands of the tropical Pacific. Several European and Asian species have been introduced to these areas as well as North America, Hawaii and New Zealand, where they generally compete for habitat with native birds and are considered to be invasive spec...
, for example, has laterally placed eyes to cover a wide field of view, but can also move them together to point to the front so their fields overlap giving stereopsis. A remarkable example is the chameleon
Chameleon

Chameleons are a distinctive and highly specialized clade of lizards. They are distinguished by their parrot-like zygodactylous feet, their separately mobile and stereoscopic eyes, their very long, highly modified, and rapidly extrudable tongues, their swaying gait, and the possession by many of a prehensile tail, crests or horns on their...
, whose eyes appear to be mounted on turret
Gun turret

A gun turret is a device that protects the crew or mechanism of a artillery and at the same time lets the weapon be aimed and fired in many directions....
s, each moving independently of the other, up or down, left or right. Nevertheless, the chameleon can bring both of its eyes to bear on a single object when it is hunting, showing vergence and stereopsis.

Binocular summation


Binocular summation means that the detection threshold
Threshold

Threshold may refer to:...
 for a stimulus
Stimulus (physiology)

In physiology, a stimulus is a detectable change in the internal or external environment. When a stimulus is applied to a sensory receptor, it elicits or influences a Reflex action via Transduction ....
 is lower with two eyes than with one. There are two forms. First, when trying to detect a faint signal, there is a statistical advantage of using two detectors over using one. Mathematically, the advantage is equal to the square root of 2, about 1.41. Second, when some cells in the visual cortex
Visual cortex

The term visual cortex refers to the primary visual cortex and Extrastriate cortex such as V2, V3, V4, and V5....
 receive input from both eyes simultaneously, they show binocular facilitation, a greater level of activity than the sum of the two activities evoked separately from each eye. Any advantage in using two eyes in detection task over 1.41 is credited to this sort of mechanism, dubbed neural summation.

Binocular interaction


Apart from binocular summation, the two eyes can influence each other in at least three ways.

  • Pupillary diameter
    Pupil

    The pupil is the sphere that is located in the center of the Iris of the eye and that controls the amount of light that enters the eye. It appears black because most of the light entering the pupil is absorbed by the biological tissue inside the eye....
    . Light falling in one eye affects the diameter of the pupil
    Pupil

    The pupil is the sphere that is located in the center of the Iris of the eye and that controls the amount of light that enters the eye. It appears black because most of the light entering the pupil is absorbed by the biological tissue inside the eye....
    s in both eyes. One can easily see this by looking at a friend's eye while he or she closes the other: when the other eye is open, the pupil of the first eye is small; when the other eye is closed, the pupil of the first eye is large.


  • Accommodation
    Accommodation (eye)

    Accommodation is the process by which the :eye increases optical power to maintain a clear image on an object as it draws near the eye. The young human eye can change focus from distance to 7 cm from the eye in 350 milliseconds....
     and vergence
    Vergence

    A vergence is the simultaneous movement of both eyes in opposite directions to obtain or maintain single binocular vision..When a creature with binocular vision looks at an object, the eyes must rotate around a vertical axis so that the projection of the image is in the centre of the retina in both eyes....
    . Accommodation is the state of focus of the eye. If one eye is open and the other closed, and one focuses on something close, the accommodation of the closed eye will become the same as that of the open eye. Moreover, the closed eye will tend to converge to point at the object. Accommodation and convergence are linked by a reflex, so that one evokes the other.


  • Interocular transfer. The state of adaptation
    Adaptation

    Adaptation is the process, which takes place under natural selection, whereby an organism becomes better suited to its habitat. Also, the term may refer to some characteristic which stands out as being especially significant in the organism's survival....
     of one eye can have a small effect on the state of light adaptation of the other. Aftereffects induced through one eye can be measured through the other.


Utrocular discrimination


Utrocular discrimination is the ability to tell, when both eyes are open, to which eye a monocular stimulus was shown.

Singleness of vision

Once the fields of view overlap, there is a potential for confusion between the left and right eye's image of the same object. This can be dealt with in two ways: one image can be suppressed
Suppression

The term Suppression may refer to:* Oppression* Censorship* Voter suppression* Cultural suppression* Religious intolerance* Suppression of dissent...
, so that only the other is seen, or the two images can be fused. If two images of a single object are seen, this is known as double vision
Double vision

Double vision refers to Diplopia, the perception of two images from a single object.Double vision may also refer to:*Double Vision, a Malaysia TV production house...
 or diplopia
Diplopia

Diplopia, commonly known as double vision, is the simultaneous perception of two images of a single object. These images may be displaced horizontally, vertically, or diagonally in relation to each other....
. Fusion of the images from the two eyes is considered to be separate from stereopsis
Stereopsis

Stereopsis is the process in visual perception leading to the sensation of depth from the two slightly different projections of the world onto the retinas of the two eyes....
 for at least two reasons. First, some disorders of binocular vision, such as strabismus
Strabismus

Strabismus is a condition in which the eyes are not properly aligned with each other. It typically involves a lack of coordination between the Muscles of orbits that prevents bringing the gaze of each eye to the same point in space and preventing proper binocular vision, which may adversely affect depth perception....
 can spare fusion but abolish stereopsis. Second, the depth of an object either much nearer to or farther from where the eyes are fixating can be accurately judged despite the images of the object appearing double.

Fusion of images occurs only in a small volume of visual space around where the eyes are fixating. Running through the fixation point in the horizontal plane is a curved line for which objects there fall on corresponding retinal points in the two eyes. This line is called the empirical horizontal horopter
Horopter

In studies of binocular vision the horopter is a volume centred on the fixation point that contains all points in space that yield single vision....
. There is also an empirical vertical horopter, which is effectively tilted away from the eyes above the fixation point and towards the eyes below the fixation point. The horizontal and vertical horopters mark the centre of the volume of singleness of vision. Within this thin, curved volume, objects nearer and farther than the horopters are seen as single. The volume is known as Panum's fusional area (it's presumably called an area because it was measured by Panum only in the horizontal plane). Outside of Panum's fusional area (volume), double vision occurs.

Eye dominance


When each eye has its own image of objects, it becomes impossible to align images outside of Panum's fusional area with an image inside the area. This happens when one has to point to a distant object with one's finger. When one looks at one's fingertip, it is single but there are two images of the distant object. When one looks at the distant object it is single but there are two images of one's fingertip. To point successfully, one of the double images has to take precedence and one be ignored or suppressed (eye dominance). The eye of the image that takes precedence is called the dominant eye.

Stereopsis

Stereopsis
Stereopsis

Stereopsis is the process in visual perception leading to the sensation of depth from the two slightly different projections of the world onto the retinas of the two eyes....
 is an ability to make fine depth discriminations from parallax
Parallax

Parallax is an apparent displacement or difference of orientation of an object viewed along two different lines of sight, and is measured by the angle or semi-angle of inclination between those two lines....
 provided by the two eye's different positions on the head. There are two sorts: quantitative stereopsis, in which the depth seen is very similar to the actual depth of the object being judged, and qualitative stereopsis, in which the depth is correctly nearer or farther than the fixation point but the amount of depth does not grow with distance of the object from the fixation point. Quantitative stereopsis holds for small distances from the fixation plane (approximately within Panum's fusional area); qualitative stereopsis holds for larger distances from the fixation plane (outside of Panum's fusional area). Eventually an object can be moved so far from the fixation plane that there is no sense of depth of the double images--instead they appear to be on the fixation plane.

Allelotropia


Because the eyes are in different positions on the head, any object away from fixation and off the plane of the horopter has a different visual direction in each eye. Yet when the two monocular images of the object are fused, creating a Cyclopean image
Cyclopean image

Cyclopean image is a single mental of a scene created by the brain by combining two images received from the two eyes. The mental process behind construction of the Cyclopean image is crucial to Stereopsis....
, the object has a new visual direction, essentially the average of the two monocular visual directions. This is called allelotropia. The origin of the new visual direction is a point approximately between the two eyes, the so-called cyclopean eye. The position of the cyclopean eye is not usually exactly centered between the eyes, but tends to be closer to the dominant eye.

Binocular rivalry


When very different images are shown to the same retinal regions of the two eyes, perception settles on one for a few moments, then the other, then the first, and so on, for as long as one cares to look. This alternation of perception between the images of the two eyes is called binocular rivalry
Binocular rivalry

Binocular rivalry is a phenomenon of visual perception in which perception alternates between different images presented to each eye.When one image is presented to one eye and a very different image is presented to the other, instead of the two images being seen superimposed, one image is seen for a few moments, then the other, then the fir...
.

Disorders of binocular vision


To maintain stereopsis and singleness of vision, the eyes need to be pointed accurately. The position of each eye in its orbit
ORBit

ORBit is a Common Object Request Broker Architecture 2.4 compliant Object Request Broker . It features mature C , C++ and Python bindings, and less developed bindings for Perl, Lisp , Pascal , Ruby , and Tcl....
 is controlled by six extraocular muscles. Slight differences in the length or insertion position or strength of the same muscles in the two eyes can lead to a tendency for one eye to drift to a different position in its orbit from the other, especially when one is tired. This is known as phoria. One way to reveal it is with the cover-uncover test. To do this test, look at a cooperative person's eyes. Cover one eye of that person with a card. Have the person look at your finger tip. Move the finger around; this is to break the reflex that normally holds a covered eye in the correct vergence position. Hold your finger steady and then uncover the person's eye. Look at the uncovered eye. You may see it flick quickly from being wall-eyed or cross-eyed to its correct position. If the uncovered eye moved from out to in, the person has exophoria
Exophoria

Exophoria is a form of heterophoria in which there is a tendency of the eyes to deviate outward....
. If it moved from in to out, the person has esophoria
Esophoria

Esophoria is characterised by inward deviation of the eye usually due to extra-ocular muscle imbalance.Causes include:*refractive errors*divergence insufficiency...
. If the eye did not move at all, the person has orthophoria. Most people have some amount of exophoria or esophoria; it is quite normal. If the uncovered eye also moved vertically, the person has hyperphoria (if the eye moved from up to down) or hypophoria (if the eye moved from down to up). Such vertical phorias are quite rare. It is also possible for the covered eye to rotate in its orbit. Such cyclophorias cannot be seen with the cover-uncover test; they are rarer than vertical phorias.

During the cover-uncover test, a person with some phoria will notice a brief episode of double vision or diplopia
Diplopia

Diplopia, commonly known as double vision, is the simultaneous perception of two images of a single object. These images may be displaced horizontally, vertically, or diagonally in relation to each other....
 after uncovering the eye. This is a normal consequence of the eye's being briefly misaligned. If the diplopia is enduring, that is considered a disorder.

The cover-uncover test can also be used for more problematic disorders of binocular vision, the tropias. In the cover part of the test, the examiner looks at the first eye as he or she covers the second. If the eye moves from out to in, the person has exotropia
Exotropia

Exotropia is a form of strabismus where the eyes are deviated outward. It is the opposite of esotropia. People with exotropia often experience crossed diplopia....
. If it moved from in to out, the person has esotropia
Esotropia

Esotropia is a form of strabismus, or "squint", in which one or both eyes turns inward. The condition can be constantly present, or occur intermittently, and can give the affected individual a "cross-eyed" appearance....
. People with exotropia or esotropia are wall-eyed or cross-eyed respectively. These are forms of strabismus
Strabismus

Strabismus is a condition in which the eyes are not properly aligned with each other. It typically involves a lack of coordination between the Muscles of orbits that prevents bringing the gaze of each eye to the same point in space and preventing proper binocular vision, which may adversely affect depth perception....
 with amblyopia
Amblyopia

Amblyopia, otherwise known as lazy eye, is a Disease of the visual system that is characterized by poor or indistinct Visual perception in an eye that is otherwise physically normal, or out of proportion to associated structural abnormalities....
. When the covered eye is the non-amblyopic eye, the amblyopic eye suddenly becomes the person's only means of seeing. The strabismus is revealed by the movement of that eye to fixate on the examiner's finger. There are also vertical tropias (hypertropia
Hypertropia

Hypertropia is a condition of misalignment of the eyes , whereby the visual axis of one eye is higher than the fellow fixating eye.Hypotropia is the similar condition, focus being on the eye with the visual axis lower than the fellow fixating eye....
 and hypotropia) and cyclotropias.

See also


  • Amblyopia
    Amblyopia

    Amblyopia, otherwise known as lazy eye, is a Disease of the visual system that is characterized by poor or indistinct Visual perception in an eye that is otherwise physically normal, or out of proportion to associated structural abnormalities....
  • Binocular rivalry
    Binocular rivalry

    Binocular rivalry is a phenomenon of visual perception in which perception alternates between different images presented to each eye.When one image is presented to one eye and a very different image is presented to the other, instead of the two images being seen superimposed, one image is seen for a few moments, then the other, then the fir...
  • Diplopia
    Diplopia

    Diplopia, commonly known as double vision, is the simultaneous perception of two images of a single object. These images may be displaced horizontally, vertically, or diagonally in relation to each other....
  • Eye dominance
  • Eye movements
    Eye movements

    Eye movement is the Voluntary action or Reflex action movement of the eyes, helping in acquiring, fixating and tracking visual stimuli. In addition, rapid eye movement occurs during REM sleep....
  • Field of view
    Field of view

    The field of view is the angle extent of the observable world that is visual perception at any given moment.The range of visual abilities is not uniform across a field of view, and varies from animal to animal....
  • Monocular vision
    Monocular vision

    Monocular vision is Visual perception in which each eye is used separately. By using the eyes in this way, as opposed by binocular vision, the field of view is increased, while depth perception is limited....
  • Orthoptics
  • Stereoblindness
    Stereoblindness

    Stereoblindness is the inability to see in three-dimensional space using stereo vision, resulting in inability to perceive stereoscopic depth by combining and comparing images from the two eyes....
  • Stereopsis
    Stereopsis

    Stereopsis is the process in visual perception leading to the sensation of depth from the two slightly different projections of the world onto the retinas of the two eyes....
  • Stereoscopy
    Stereoscopy

    Stereoscopy, stereoscopic imaging or 3-D imaging is any technique capable of recording three-dimensional visual information or creating the stereopsis in an image....
  • Strabismus
    Strabismus

    Strabismus is a condition in which the eyes are not properly aligned with each other. It typically involves a lack of coordination between the Muscles of orbits that prevents bringing the gaze of each eye to the same point in space and preventing proper binocular vision, which may adversely affect depth perception....
  • Vision
    Visual perception

    Visual perception is the ability to interpret information from visible light reaching the eye. The resulting perception is also known as eyesight, sight or vision....
  • Vision therapy
    Vision therapy

    Vision therapy, also known as visual training, vision training, or visual therapy, is a group of techniques attempting variously to correct or improve presumed ocular, oculomotor, visual processing, and perceptual disorders." Vision therapy encompasses a wide variety of non-surgical methods which some have divided into two...


Further reading


  • Scott B. Steinman, Barbara A. Steinman and Ralph Philip Garzia. (2000). Foundations of Binocular Vision: A Clinical perspective. McGraw-Hill Medical. ISBN 0-8385-2670-5.


External links