Here is some information I have. How it applies I'm not sure. The eye is
only the aperture, lens and sensing apparatus. Because the eye is attached
to the brain it would make more sense to use a digital camera as a model
rather than film camera. The mind can read an image and give a response in
as little as 0.04 seconds- a professional pingpong players response time,
for instance. Nerve transmission time mind to brain can be measured by
measuring cortical evoked potential responses to visual stimuli. I might
have once know the limiting values but I don't recall them. A big name in
research in this area is Meichenbaum, if you want to look it up. As for
aperture, the lens to retina distance is roughly 25 mm. Maximum pupil size,
i.e. aperture diameter, is maybe 8 mm in an adult, so the maximum F stop
would be 25/8= 3.1. Minimum aperture would be about 25/2 for 'pinpoint"
pupils, an F stop of 12.5. I think that the eye processes light sensation
somewhat differently at low light levels, so "film speed" would be a guess.
Remember too that the eye and brain cannot distinguish as separate images
any sequence more rapid than about 14/second. That is the basis for movies
and television, sequences of still images projected faster than the eye can
distinguish, thus blending them into apparent continuous motion.

I----- Original Message -----
From: "George L Smyth" <glsm...@yahoo.com>
To: <pinhole-discussion@p at ???????>
Sent: Sunday, January 05, 2003 10:53 AM
Subject: Re: [pinhole-discussion] Human eye


> On 22 Jul 2002, at 11:16, eco...@aol.com wrote:
>
> > I know this is not strictly pinhole, but I wondered if
> > anyone had access to the average human eye values for the
> > camera variables. ie Respective - film speed, shutter speed,
> > aperture, focus range, depth of field etc. Thanks
> >     Ellis
>
>
> When I looked into shutter speed many years ago, I came upon the
conclusion
> that the eye's shutter speed is approximately 1/100 second.  You can
verify
> this by taking successive pictures of a waterfall.  We all know that
slowing
> down the shutter speed to a second or more will make for silky water,
which is
> not what we see.  From there, take pictures with faster and faster speeds
> (don't forget to take notes).  When you get the results, compare the
pictures
> with what you see and make the decision for yourself.
>
> Cheers -
>
> george
>
> =====
> Handmade Photographic Images - http://GLSmyth.com
> DRiP Investing - http://DRiPInvesting.org
>
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