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binocular vision

NOUN
  1. vision involving the use of both eyes

How To Use binocular vision In A Sentence

  • So, shouldn't a truly immersive 3D experience include a way of recreating binocular vision?
  • In the group with 6/12 binocular vision, five had uniocular acuities of 6/9 but managed only 6/12 binocularly and two had uniocular acuities of 6/18 but achieved the higher standard binocularly.
  • The fish possesses a further adaptation to enhance its accuracy: binocular vision.
  • For example, in damage to the sixth cranial nerve, which paralyses outward movement, causing horizontal diplopia, this treatment may allow useful binocular vision with a compensatory head posture, and it may even hasten recovery.
  • But even if he is a bit of an old parkie, grudgingly showing the public round his precious grounds, Shattuck still knows more about the park than most, and his ‘binocular vision’ is as sharp as ever.
  • Binocular vision affords depth perception, multiple dimensions, and the ability to appreciate opposites simultaneously.
  • Objective To observe the eye position and binocular vision function in congenital esotropia treated with surgery.
  • By suturing shut one of a kitten's eyes at various stages of development and for various periods of time, Hubel and Wiesel (1970) showed that certain cortical and thalamic areas supporting binocular vision (specifically, ocular dominance columns and cells in the lateral geniculate body) will not develop normally unless kittens receive patterned visual stimulation during the 4th to 12th weeks of life. Innateness and Language
  • It has binocular vision for locating its prey and now rests motionless, waiting for the potential victim to come closer.
  • The fish possesses a further adaptation to enhance its accuracy: binocular vision.
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