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Academic Journals
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From:Science (Vol. 298, Issue 5592) Peer-ReviewedA goal in visual neuroscience is to reveal how the visual system reconstructs the three-dimensional (3D) representation of the worm from two-dimensional retina[ images. Although the importance of texture gradient cues...
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From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 15, Issue 11) Peer-ReviewedWe aim to investigate a control strategy for the circular tracking movement in a three-dimensional (3D) space based on the accuracy of the visual information. After setting the circular orbits for the frontal and...
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From:PSA Journal (Vol. 73, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe Journal's occasional feature entitle Focus on a member or member-club turns now to the Chicago Stereo Camera Club and a somewhat unusual situation where a Photographic Society of America member-club uses a...
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From:British Journal of Ophthalmology (Vol. 86, Issue 10) Peer-ReviewedAim: To use 3D ultrasonography (3DUS) for the diagnosis of retinoblastoma. Methods: Five eyes of three children with retinoblastoma were evaluated using a commercially available computerised 3DUS system. Interactive...
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From:Forensic Science International (Vol. 140, Issue 2-3) Peer-ReviewedAbstract Currently, optical devices, such as microscopes and CCD cameras, are utilized for identification of bullets and tool marks in the field of forensic science. While these optical methods are easily manageable...
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From:Advanced Manufacturing Technology (Vol. 33, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedResearch initiatives are focussed on developing technologies that enable assembling of complex 3D (three-dimensional) structures. In particular, there is an intensive on-going research in the field of nanofabrication....
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From:Optometry Times (Vol. 4, Issue 5)Atlanta -- Are "Avatar" and other 3D movies an emerging punic health opportunity for optometry as well as box office blockbusters? As 3D and stereoscopic 3D (S3D) become more common in movies and television, video...
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From:Advanced Manufacturing Technology (Vol. 30, Issue 12) Peer-ReviewedThree-dimensional (3D) models are being deployed for use in a variety of applications related to object recognition, tracking, augmented reality, computer graphics, and so on. It should be noted that, despite their wide...
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From:PeerJ Computer Science (Vol. 7) Peer-ReviewedPlanes are the core geometric models present everywhere in the three-dimensional real world. There are many examples of manual constructions based on planar patches: facades, corridors, packages, boxes, etc. In these...
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From:Proceedings of the Estonian Academy of Sciences (Vol. 60, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe spreading rate of initially closely located water particles and passive drifters in the surface layer of the Gulf of Finland is studied using autonomous surface drifters. The average spreading rate increases with...
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From:INFORMS Journal on Computing (Vol. 20, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedScatter search is a population-based method that has recently been shown to yield promising outcomes for solving combinatorial and nonlinear optimization problems. Based on formulations originally proposed in the 1960s...
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From:Science (Vol. 298, Issue 5592) Peer-ReviewedWe compared three-dimensional structure-from-motion (3D-SFM) processing in awake monkeys and humans using functional magnetic resonance imaging. Occipital and midlevel extrastriate visual areas showed similar activation...
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From:Quality (Vol. 51, Issue 13) Peer-ReviewedToday, 3-D data is required for many measurement, control and error proofing applications. But most people think that implementing 3-D vision is challenging, requiring a lot of experience, time and expense. What if all...
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From:Mechanical Engineering-CIME (Vol. 129, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedTHE THREE-DIMENSIONAL computer programs of the future will grant users the ability to see through walls and objects just like Superman. That's the conclusion of Niklas Elmqvist, in his doctoral dissertation in...
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From:Advanced Manufacturing Technology (Vol. 31, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedOne of the popular techniques for three-dimensional (3D) imaging is based on stereovision. In stereovision, which is used by human eyes, two images of an object are captured and then combined together to form a 3D...
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From:Journal of Respiratory Diseases (Vol. 27, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedByline: PHILLIP M. BOISELLE, MD and ROBERT C. GILKESON, MD ABSTRACT: Advances in CT technology afford the ability to create 3-dimensional (3-D) reconstructions of the airways in only a few minutes. The 2 basic types...
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From:The Monist (Vol. 88, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedTheodore Sider has recently produced an argument which he takes to show that three-dimensionalism is incompatible with the possibility of time travel. I wish to argue that there is indeed a problem for the...
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From:Optometry Times (Vol. 5, Issue 5)Are 3D movies not only box-office blockbusters but also an emerging public health opportunity for optometry? As 3D and stereoscopic 3D (S3D) become more common in movies and television, video games, mobile devices, and...
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From:Plastics Engineering (Vol. 69, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedU.S. Patent 8,361,376 (Jan. 29, 2013), "Process of Making a Three-Dimensional Object," Takashi Ito, and Tsuneo Hagiwara (CMET Inc., Kanagawa, Japan). Rapid prototyping involves selectively curing patterned layers...
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From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 14, Issue 8) Peer-ReviewedIn the size-weight illusion, when two objects of identical weight but different volume are lifted, the smaller object is typically perceived to weigh more than the larger object. A well-known explanation for this and...