Retinal disparity
Binocular cues, as opposed to monocular cues.
Binocular cues are, "Depth cues that depend on the use of two eyes" (Myers, D., 2007, p. 245).Monocular cues are, "Depth cues available to either eye alone" (Myers, D., 2007, p. 247).Basically binocular cues are things that help us to perceive depth and we have to use both eyes to perceive them. Monocular cues are the same thing, but you can use only one eye or the other and still see the same effect.Depth effects that depend on both eyes working at the same time (binocular) are Retinal Disparity and Convergence.Depth effects that depend only on the use of one eye are: Relative size, Interposition, Relative clarity, Texture gradient, Relative height, Relative motion, Linear perspective and Light and shadow.
The binocular cue for perception of distance is linear perspective. It is the visual measure of which items are close to the viewer and which items are far away from them.
visual cues
The monocular zone is the region of the visual field that is seen only by one eye. The binocular zone is the part of the visual field seen by both eyes. The nose is the obvious obstacle between the eyes so it is the prominent cause of the difference between monocular zones of each eye.
switch to wordpad .what are two visual cues that tell you that wordpad is the ac8t7ive program?
Binocular
To orient themselves in flight, pilots either: 1. Use visual cues outside the cockpit to keep the airplane stable and on track or 2. (more used) use instruments inside the cockpit that act as visual cues (attitude indicator, speed indicator, altimeter, and GPS)
Monocular eyepiece had only one lens while binocular only has 2.
Upside Down, Monocular Image Passes thru The Optic Nerve
need to process and correlate visual and aural cues simultaneously