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Optic flow

Optic flow is the perceived visual motion of objects as the observer moves relative to them. For example, say you are driving a car. A sign on the side of the road would move from the center of your vision to the side, growing as you approached. If you had 360 degree vision, this sign would proceed to move quickly past your side to your back, where it would shrink. This motion of the sign is its optic flow.

This allows you to judge how close you are to certain objects, and how quickly you are approaching them. It is also useful for avoiding obstacles: if an object in front of you is expanding but not moving, you are probably headed straight for it, but if it is expanding but moving slowly to the side, you will probably pass by it. Since optic flow relies only on relative motion, it remains the same when you are moving and the world remains still, and when you are standing still but everything you can see is moving past you. These properties have made the concept useful for robot designers writing visual navigation routines. It also appears to be used by certain insects, especially flying ones, where a large optic flow (indicating a quickly approaching obstacle) triggers muscles to move away.

Related

Optical Flow in computer vision.

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Last updated: 08-21-2005 02:18:02
Last updated: 01-04-2007 01:18:57
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