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The unusual eyewear helps researchers test if cuttlefish can perceive depth in the same way a human does.
Scientists hoping to learn more about how cuttlefish see the world came up with a rather interesting test, and it involves slapping a pint-sized pair of 3D glasses on the little sea creatures.
Instead, the scientists moved onto to spectral 3D glasses — like the old-school ones that use red and blue lenses.
This proved that mantises actually use 3D vision, and constitutes essentially the first definitive test of 3D vision in invertebrates. Newcastle University.
What does it do? Generates a 3D model of your head using just a few shots you’ve taken with your iPad. Then you’re free to try on thousands of frames on your virtual face, so you can get a ...
Scientists outfitted cuttlefish with red and blue 3D glasses to test how their vision works and found that it's very similar to our own.
Samsung and RealD announce a partnership to make televisions that need simple passive glasses, while still getting full high-definition. Is this the beginning of the end for 3D shutter glasses?