Title: Topographical effects
1Topographical effects
Different tilt angles were used to demonstrate
the effects on the perception of
topography. Tilt compensation was also used as a
tool to correct for the vertical image
distortion.
Penny 15x 45 degree tilt w/ corresponding gray
level histogram
2Penny 15x 0 degree tilt, w/ corresponding gray
level histogram (less contrast, histogram skewed)
3Penny 15x 70 degree tilt, more topographical
contrast
Penny 15x 45 degree tilt
Penny 15x 70 degree tilt w/ 70 degree tilt comp.
Essentially the image is stretched notice the
aperture now appears oblong instead of round.
Penny 15x 45 degree tilt w/ 45 degree tilt comp.
4Regular image
Same image but stretched in Y (same thing as
tilt comp)
With Tilt Comp
5A work of caution is needed for the
interpretation of 3D effects. The location of
light and shadow can deceive the eye. A good
example of this can be seen in the book on pages
212-213. The difference between bottom
illumination (left) and natural illumination
from above (left) can be significant.
Same deal but this time at 70 degree tilt
6We also observed how very high tilt can cause the
image to lose focus at the top and bottom of the
image
7In addition to tilt effects, Stereo pairs were
also collected to demonstrate 3D imaging (the
tilt axis is horizontal so turn the pictures 90
degrees in the stereo viewer)