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  2. Telecentric lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telecentric_lens

    A telecentric lens is a special optical lens (often an objective lens or a camera lens) that has its entrance or exit pupil, or both, at infinity. The size of images produced by a telecentric lens is insensitive to either the distance between an object being imaged and the lens, or the distance between the image plane and the lens, or both, and ...

  3. Unconscious inference - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unconscious_inference

    In perceptual psychology, unconscious inference (German: unbewusster Schluss), also referred to as unconscious conclusion, [1] is a term coined in 1867 by the German physicist and polymath Hermann von Helmholtz to describe an involuntary, pre-rational and reflex-like mechanism which is part of the formation of visual impressions.

  4. Brunswik's lens model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunswik's_lens_model

    Brunswik's lens model is a conceptual framework for describing and studying how people make judgments. For example, a person judging the size of a distant object, physicians assessing the severity of disease, investors judging the quality of stocks, weather forecasters predicting tomorrow's weather and personnel officers rating job candidates all face similar tasks.

  5. Psychophysical parallelism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychophysical_parallelism

    Psychophysical parallelism can be compared to epiphenomenalism due to the fact that they are both non-fundamentalist methods to link mind and body causality. Psychophysical parallelism is the ideology that the mind and the body hold no interaction between them, but that they are synchronized.

  6. Talk:Telecentric lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Telecentric_lens

    Secondly, it only applies to an object-space telecentric lens. Third, it loses the point of how a telecentric lens actually works. What makes a lens telecentric is not that all the rays are "about parallel" to the optical axis. The properties of a telecentric lens come specifically from the fact that the chief ray is parallel to the axis.

  7. Perspectivism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perspectivism

    Here, contemporary scholar Ken Gemes views Nietzsche's perspectivism to above all be a principle of moral psychology, rejecting interpretations of it as an epistemological thesis outrightly. [4] It is through this method of critique that the deficiencies of various perspectives can be alleviated—through a critical mediation of the differences ...

  8. Reverse perspective - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverse_perspective

    Example of computer generated reverse perspectives; YouTube video demonstration: "Hypercentric optics: A camera lens that can see behind objects" Edmund Optics - Hypercentric Lenses; YouTube video demonstration transition to reverse perspective and back: "Reverse perspective 3D viewport & render"

  9. Phenomenalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phenomenalism

    In metaphysics, phenomenalism is the view that physical objects cannot justifiably be said to exist as "things-in-themselves", but only as perceptual phenomena or sensory stimuli (e.g. redness, hardness, softness, sweetness, etc.) situated in time and in space.

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