Enhancing Relief Illusion Patents (Class 352/43)
  • Patent number: 4303316
    Abstract: A process for recording and projecting a three-dimensional visual scene onto a receiving surface from which the scene may be viewed in stereopsis by the unaided human eye. The scene is recorded from right and left view positions laterally separated by a distance of no more than about one inch, and groups of recorded right and recorded left views are alternately projected onto a receiving surface in sequence such that the visual duration of each group varies from a minimum to a maximum time which is generally proportional to the distance of the nearest non-moving object of special regard in the scene from the recording positions and is approximately equal to the visio-psychological suppression rate of the human eyes.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 27, 1979
    Date of Patent: December 1, 1981
    Inventor: Robert H. McElveen
  • Patent number: 4294523
    Abstract: This invention utilizes a series of two-dimensional photographs of successive cross-sections of an object. The photographs are arranged on a film strip in the order in which the successive sections appear in the object. The film strip is transparent and is intermittently illuminated as the successive frames of the film strip move across an optical path. A projection screen in the optical path is moved with respect to the optical path so that as each successive photograph is illuminated, that photograph is projected onto the screen at a successive position and so that each photograph as projected on the screen appears more remote from an observer than the preceding one. Thus there is formed on the screen a series of images which appear to an observer having persistence of vision to be a composite three-dimensional imgage. The illuminating means may omit the illumination of certain photographs of the series, so that only selected photographs are reproduced on the screen.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 19, 1979
    Date of Patent: October 13, 1981
    Assignee: The Zyntrax Corporation
    Inventors: Edward A. Woloshuk, Gregory J. Walz, Robert O. Kretzschmar
  • Patent number: 4231642
    Abstract: My invention relates to photographing scenes with a standard motion picture camera in which there is a relative motion between the scene and camera with the purpose of stereoscopic viewing of the motion picture without the need for viewing aids at the eye. The system is compatible with scenes photographed without this relative motion but the reproduction is flat. The film (or other appropriate media) is arrayed in a vertical plane and constrained to move horizontally around a segment of a circle of radius 2R. At the center of the film circle is a film motion compensator which can be a multi-faceted mirror drum of radius R. The film is rapidly scanned about the center of this circle by a scan projector. Projection optics on the projector, project the sequential film frames onto a relatively large circular cylindrical screen having its vertical axis coincident with the projector axis.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 1, 1979
    Date of Patent: November 4, 1980
    Inventor: Robert B. Collender
  • Patent number: 4176923
    Abstract: The invention involves theatre size stereoscopic motion pictures without glasses and without restricted viewing zones and which can be photographed with a standard motion picture camera. Relative lateral motion is required between the camera and the scene. The film is run horizontally through a scan projector in which a given scene on the screen is constructed from several adjacent scenes on the film. The scanned stereoscopic picture can be viewed from different perspectives. A central 3-facet scanning projector of small mass and radius projects over a 120.degree. sector onto triangular elemental mirror scanners causing the node of the image of the projection lens to sweep a large radius about the projector center. From the scanner the sweeping optical axis of the projector passes through the rotation axis where the picture is imaged onto a concentric semi-specular screen. Three vertical concentrically moving aerial viewing slits are generated 120.degree.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 10, 1978
    Date of Patent: December 4, 1979
    Inventor: Robert B. Collender
  • Patent number: 4158487
    Abstract: My invention relates to photographing scenes with standard motion picture photographic equipment where multiple views of a subject are photographed while the subject rests on a moving turntable and the stationary camera has its optical axis pointed at the turntable rotation axis or where the subject is stationary and the camera effectively moves in an arc about an axis located between the camera and scene.The surface of the processed film (or other appropriate media) is arrayed in a vertical plane and constrained to move horizontally around a portion of a circle. Film images are scanned by a light source and radially projected in a direction away from a vertical rotation axis. Concentric with the vertical axis are the semi-specular screen of radius R and the scanning projector circle of radius close to R/3. The screen reflects projected light in a horizontal plane and scatters projected light in a vertical plane.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 17, 1978
    Date of Patent: June 19, 1979
    Inventor: Robert B. Collender
  • Patent number: 4131342
    Abstract: An optical viewing system and method is described, whose operating principles are based on two psycho-physiological characteristics of the human visual system. One of these characteristics is the time delay between the arrival of a light stimulus or image on the retina of the eye and its recognition or interpretation at the visual cortex. The other characteristic is the non-achromatism of the eye. The first of these characteristics manifests itself in the so-called Pulfrich illusion, a moving object being apparently displaced from its actual path when viewed by an observer with a neutral filter in front of one eye, as differential visual time-lag results from the difference in brightness of the two retinal images. The second characteristic manifests itself in the so-called chromostereoscopic effect which, under certain conditions, creates the illusion that differently colored objects, although actually at the same distance from an observer, are at different distances from him.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 14, 1976
    Date of Patent: December 26, 1978
    Inventor: Leslie P. Dudley
  • Patent number: 4092654
    Abstract: An improved camera and process of coding images and a product produced thereby is described in which an image of graphics is scrambled by operation of a pseudoscopic camera. The graphics and focal plane-type shutter are moved simultaneously relative to an objective lens and a graticule so as to produce an image of the graphics which will appear inchoate to ordinary vision. The image can be unscrambled by viewing the same through a graticule of the same nature as that used in the scrambling process.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 13, 1976
    Date of Patent: May 30, 1978
    Inventor: Alfred V. Alasia
  • Patent number: 4037950
    Abstract: Methods and apparatus for aiding a photographer in determining, coordinating and adjusting numerous variables which bear on the quality of a stereoscopic picture employing a lenticular screen. The variables may include, depending upon the photographic method employed and the scene to be photographed, the desired size of the stereoscopic picture, the resolving power and lenticule width of the lenticular screen; the number and size of two-dimensional picture negatives which are taken and included in the stereoscopic picture, the distance between adjacent camera vantage points from which the negatives are taken, the camera focal length, the distance from the camera to the nearest element or object of the photographed scene, the distance from the camera to the farthest element or object of the scene, and the distance from the camera to an element or object -- the "key subject matter" -- in the scene which is to lie in the plane of the stereoscopic picture.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 15, 1976
    Date of Patent: July 26, 1977
    Assignee: Dimensional Development Corporation
    Inventors: Allen Kwok Wah Lo, Jerry Curtis Nims
  • Patent number: 3973840
    Abstract: A mannequin comprising a head part and a torso part adjustably joined together. In the torso part a sound moving picture projector is mounted to project facial images on a film in a light beam upwardly through the neck into the head as the film is moved through the projector. Simultaneously sound from a track on the film is picked up, amplified and audibly reproduced. The sound and facial images are correlated to simulate a speaking person. The head part has a face piece with well defined forehead, nose, cheeks and chin but only smooth areas for eyes and mouth which is molded of transparent plastic and surface coated as a rear projection screen. Means in the head receive the light beam from the projector and transmit onto the rear projection screen so that the projected facial features correspond in location to the facial features on the face piece.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 3, 1974
    Date of Patent: August 10, 1976
    Assignee: Corporation of the President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints
    Inventors: G. Richard Jacobs, Cluff Peck, Dean G. Soderquist
  • Patent number: 3960563
    Abstract: Methods and apparatus for aiding a photographer in determining, coordinating and adjusting numerous variables which bear on the quality of a stereoscopic picture employing a lenticular screen. The variables may include, depending upon the photographic method employed and the scene to be photographed, the desired size of the stereoscopic picture, the resolving power and lenticule width of the lenticular screen, the number and size of two-dimensional picture negatives which are taken and included in the stereoscopic picture, the distance between adjacent camera vantage points from which the negatives are taken, the camera focal length, the distance from the camera to the nearest element or object of the photographed scene, the distance from the camera to the farthest element or object of the scene, and the distance from the camera to an element or object -- the "key subject matter" -- in the scene which is to lie in the plane of the stereoscopic picture.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 24, 1974
    Date of Patent: June 1, 1976
    Assignee: Dimensional Development Corporation
    Inventors: Allen Kwok Wah Lo, Jerry Curtis Nims