Tuesday, 10 July 2012

Animated 3D Wallpapers

Animated 3D Wallpapers Biography:
An autostereogram is a single-image stereogram (SIS), designed to create the visual illusion of a three-dimensional (3D) scene from a two-dimensional image in the human brain. In order to perceive 3D shapes in these autostereograms, the brain must overcome the normally automatic coordination between focusing and vergence.
The simplest type of autostereogram consists of horizontally repeating patterns and is known as a wallpaper autostereogram. When viewed with proper vergence, the repeating patterns appear to float above or below the background. The Magic Eye books feature another type of autostereogram called a random dot autostereogram. One such autostereogram is illustrated above right. In this type of autostereogram, every pixel in the image is computed from a pattern strip and a depth map. Usually, a hidden 3D scene emerges when the image is viewed with the correct vergence.
Autostereograms are similar to normal stereograms except they are viewed without a stereoscope. A stereoscope presents 2D images of the same object from slightly different angles to the left eye and the right eye, allowing the brain to reconstruct the original object via binocular disparity. With an autostereogram, the brain receives repeating 2D patterns from both eyes, but fails to correctly match them. It pairs two adjacent patterns into a virtual object based on wrong parallax angles, thus placing the virtual object at a depth different from that of the autostereogram image.
There are two ways an autostereogram can be viewed: wall-eyed and cross-eyed.[1] Most autostereograms (including those in this article) are designed to be viewed in only one way, which is usually wall-eyed. Wall-eyed viewing requires that the two eyes adopt a relatively parallel angle, while cross-eyed viewing requires a relatively convergent angle.
Contents
[hide] The 3D effects in the example autostereogram are created by repeating the tiger rider icons every 140 pixels on the background plane, the shark rider icons every 130 pixels on the second plane, and the tiger icons every 120 pixels on the highest plane. The closer a set of icons are packed horizontally, the higher they are lifted from the background plane. This repeat distance is referred to as the depth or z-axis value of a particular pattern in the autostereogram. The depth value is also known as Z-buffer value.
Animated 3D Wallpapers
Animated 3D Wallpapers
Animated 3D Wallpapers
Animated 3D Wallpapers
Animated 3D Wallpapers
Animated 3D Wallpapers
Animated 3D Wallpapers
Animated 3D Wallpapers
Animated 3D Wallpapers
Animated 3D Wallpapers
Animated 3D Wallpapers
Animated 3D Wallpapers
Animated 3D Wallpapers
Animated 3D Wallpapers
Animated 3D Wallpapers
Animated 3D Wallpapers
Animated 3D Wallpapers
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Animated 3D Wallpapers
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Animated 3D Wallpapers
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Animated 3D Wallpapers

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