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I came across a fascinating paper by Charles Poynton, discussing motion blur in
films and video--and the different ways we *perceive* such blur depending on the
technological platform/device its viewed on-- CRTs, LCDs, film projected in a
theater, etc. (It answered many questions I've been mulling over for years--why
there *are* differences in perception.) Not a CG discussion at all; it's about
the deeper principles involved. The paper may be a bit dated as to technology,
but not the concepts.
http://www.poynton.com/PDFs/Motion_portrayal.pdf
Ken
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"Kenneth" <kdw### [at] earthlinknet> wrote in message
news:web.4b56894a790e4dbe65f302820@news.povray.org...
>I came across a fascinating paper by Charles Poynton, discussing motion
>blur in
> films and video--and the different ways we *perceive* such blur depending
> on the
> technological platform/device its viewed on-- CRTs, LCDs, film projected
> in a
> theater, etc. (It answered many questions I've been mulling over for
> years--why
> there *are* differences in perception.) Not a CG discussion at all; it's
> about
> the deeper principles involved. The paper may be a bit dated as to
> technology,
> but not the concepts.
That's really neat. I hadn't seen it before, and I really enjoyed reading
it. Thanks for the heads up.
--
Jack
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