BreakfastBeerz t1_jeakwwt wrote
Considering the human eye sees somewhere between 30 and 60 frames per second, and current high speed cameras can see well over 250 frames per second I think those humanoid robots will be just fine.
InjuryApart6808 t1_jears30 wrote
Our eyes don’t work like a camera.
V_es t1_jeasckz wrote
Our eyes have a limit of what we can comprehend. High speed cameras and faster data analysis- not.
InjuryApart6808 t1_jeat1kj wrote
So, according to his logic, if the human eye processes between 30-60 frames. A light flashing or fan spinning at 30-60 times per second would appear stationary.
BreakfastBeerz t1_jeattwz wrote
You mean like when you watch a fan or airplane propeller start up and the blades start to appear to slow down, then stop, then go backwards and then disappear all together?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6IV_sa9_IxU
Take a guess at what point in the video the blades are turning at ~60 times per second
InjuryApart6808 t1_jeauqfi wrote
You’re using a video captured by a camera. You’re actually proving my point. The camera is likely recording at 60 fps.
Fiberdonkey5 t1_jeaxk8c wrote
This can occur with the naked eye as well. Spinning motor shafts can often appear stationary when looking at them which is why there is a tool called a stroboscope that rapidly flashes light at variable speeds so you can visually see if the shaft has stopped spinning.
BreakfastBeerz t1_jeav6w3 wrote
Are you really telling me you've never seen that in person?
TheGrumpyre t1_jeaznvu wrote
I've never seen that in person, but I'm somebody else.
BreakfastBeerz t1_jeav3c9 wrote
You are correct, cameras work a lot better.
InjuryApart6808 t1_jeavfky wrote
Not if something is spinning at the frame rate of the camera. Which is what the post is about. Then that object would appear stationary. Human eyes don’t do that, it would appear as a blur, and we would infer that the object is moving.
BreakfastBeerz t1_jeb091n wrote
You've never watched an airplane propeller start up? It does exactly that, it appears to slow down, stop, go backwards, then it disappears.
ForumDragonrs t1_jebajwf wrote
I also see this a lot with car tires. If you watch a video of someone on a dyno, you'll likely start to see the tires slow down and then go backwards.
[deleted] t1_jeb0p9q wrote
[removed]
blueeyedkittens t1_jeb3f90 wrote
if the rotation speed is at a resonant frequency with the frame rate, they can appear stationary or appear to rotate backwards, or slowly etc
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