Badly Shaved Monkey
Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
- Joined
- Feb 5, 2004
- Messages
- 5,363
Can someone explain a phenomenon I have observed whereby screwing your eyelids half-shut can sometimes make a blurry image sharper?
(The irritating thing is that BSM intended to post this a few days ago after having that experience yet again, but BSM's poor substitute for a life intruded and he didn't get a chance and he can't remember the exact circumstances required for the trick to work, so he's hoping others can recognise the experience without him having to explain in more detail. I think I may have been trying to a signpost through a rain-spattered car window.)
I have several possible mechanisms in mind. I don't think it affects the eyeball itself to make it focus differently by squashing and altering its shape. Do the gaps in your eyelashes act like a load of pinhole lenses, though I'm not sure how that would help. I've wondered whether it's a perceptual trick- the image is not really better, but by screwing up your eyes and reducing the overall brightness you reduce your visual system's 'expectations' of image quality so the actual image is sharper by reference to a lowered expectation.
And while we're on the subject of signal-noise ratios. Can anyone remind me about the background to a technique for picking up really weak signals that would normally be undetectable by adding white noise to the signal? I think the purpose is to raise the amplitude of the signal above the threshold of detector. I remember reading about it in Scientific American a few years ago, but can now remember no more details.
(The irritating thing is that BSM intended to post this a few days ago after having that experience yet again, but BSM's poor substitute for a life intruded and he didn't get a chance and he can't remember the exact circumstances required for the trick to work, so he's hoping others can recognise the experience without him having to explain in more detail. I think I may have been trying to a signpost through a rain-spattered car window.)
I have several possible mechanisms in mind. I don't think it affects the eyeball itself to make it focus differently by squashing and altering its shape. Do the gaps in your eyelashes act like a load of pinhole lenses, though I'm not sure how that would help. I've wondered whether it's a perceptual trick- the image is not really better, but by screwing up your eyes and reducing the overall brightness you reduce your visual system's 'expectations' of image quality so the actual image is sharper by reference to a lowered expectation.
And while we're on the subject of signal-noise ratios. Can anyone remind me about the background to a technique for picking up really weak signals that would normally be undetectable by adding white noise to the signal? I think the purpose is to raise the amplitude of the signal above the threshold of detector. I remember reading about it in Scientific American a few years ago, but can now remember no more details.