this post was submitted on 20 Feb 2024
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I'm curious if this relies on the fact that we're looking at on pixelated screens to work. But not so curious that I'll print it out to check.
I've seen this illusion on paper and it still works. Not that printed paper is functionally different from pixels.
Ha, good point. I'm showing my age here. I understand our modern phone screens have resolution approaching that of good print, but when I think of a screen my brain still defaults to something like a 14" VGA at 57PPI :-)
As far as I know it relies on the fact that you only have clear vision in the central 20% of you FoV, and your brain just makes the rest up. Also the big blind spot
I thought it was 2°? A dime held out at arms length if I recall.
Honestly, idfk. Maybe that's the blind spot?
Just now looking at things the clear bit of my FoV feels like 20%...which is clearly suuuper scientific. I'm getting ill, and have enough energy to comment on the internet or fact check myself....not both.
Wikipedia says it's more like +/-1° or about 2° is where you have more cones than rods. +/-10° has elevated cones compared to other parts of your FOV
That being said, not sure how much I trust this graph given that I clearly have a blind spot on the right side for my right eye (temple side) but this marks it as only on the nose side? Unless I'm mistaken
E: am mistaken
Everyone's eyes are different. I'm sure there's a blind spot that's supposed to be where they say it is, but who's to say your eyes are exactly like the average eye?
The blind spot is where the nerves pass through the retina to reach your optic nerve. I was mistaken; because the image is flipped when it passes through the lens, the nose side has the blind spot but visually the hole is on the temple side, as is shown here
Neat!