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In my land we have a race of human-like cyclops.

The only real difference is their increased strength, and the fact they only have one eye.

Would having one eye affect depth perception, and if so how can I explain a solution to this issue without using magic?

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    $\begingroup$ The opposite question actually just got asked recently on biology.SE: Telling Distance with One Eye. It turns out, depth perception is actually quite the complicated process, fusing lots of information sources together! $\endgroup$
    – Cort Ammon
    Commented Jul 16, 2017 at 23:25
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    $\begingroup$ Does it have to be a human like eye? Or could it be a single, multi-faceted eye like a fly or bee, etc? Or perhaps human like, but larger, and able to have 2 pupils/etc so that you can get stereoscopic vision? $\endgroup$
    – ivanivan
    Commented Jul 17, 2017 at 2:42
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    $\begingroup$ As someone who only has one working eye I can tel you you can compensate for a lack of depth perception quite well, the biggest problem is catching things, because things thrown are usually thrown high enough I can't use the ground for estimation. You learn to unconsciously judge distance by the size of familiar things, like licence plates. $\endgroup$
    – John
    Commented Jul 17, 2017 at 3:50
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    $\begingroup$ Ever seen a person with a lazy eye? They're functioning as cyclop, brain just ignores the other eye input. Your cyclop requires as much explanation as person with lazy eye surviving a day. $\endgroup$
    – Agent_L
    Commented Jul 17, 2017 at 11:35
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    $\begingroup$ Ever played a first person shooter game with a single screen? Then you know how a cyclops sees the world. Mr. Cyclops should be able to navigate his world without too much trouble. $\endgroup$
    – nikie
    Commented Jul 17, 2017 at 13:03

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Supposedly birds (those with eyes set on the sides of their heads) compensate for monocular vision with rapid head movements, their brains stitching together images from multiple angles into one 3d image.

From http://www.ducks.org/conservation/waterfowl-research-science/a-birds-eye-view

Another way birds compensate for monocular vision is rapid head movement. By moving their head rapidly from side to side, birds can observe an object with one eye from two different angles in quick succession. This creates a three-dimensional picture and greatly improves depth perception. Although difficult to see in ducks, this behavior can easily be observed in a backpedaling goose as the bird swivels its head from side to side judging the distance, location, and timing of its landing.

Your cyclopses (cyclopes?) could do the same. They could nod their head as they were going along, as if they were grooving to internal music. This would not preclude them from also grooving to internal music. Or they could sway their heads from side to side like a snake charmer. Or rotate them left to right, as if constantly saying no. There are many head motions your cyclops could make, all of which change the position of the eye and so enable 3d images. I encourage you to try them all in the presence of friends, possibly with a cyclops eye taped to your glasses. Decide which is the best fit for your world.

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    $\begingroup$ Interesting (and entertaining) answer! $\endgroup$
    – Josh B.
    Commented Jul 17, 2017 at 3:07
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    $\begingroup$ Would be reaally strange seeing a huge guy bob and weave their head while moving as if he's doing some sort of ancient Egyptian ritualistic dance. $\endgroup$ Commented Jul 17, 2017 at 5:01
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    $\begingroup$ +1 o for the logic. -1 for making me snort coffee with the mental image of a Cyclops grooving to internal music. Just kidding. $\endgroup$
    – Paul TIKI
    Commented Jul 17, 2017 at 13:56
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    $\begingroup$ "Your cyclopses (cyclopes?)" - Cyclopi? $\endgroup$
    – Izkata
    Commented Jul 17, 2017 at 18:27
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    $\begingroup$ @Izkata Cyclopi: Greek Cyclops plural ends in "οπες" which is pronounced opi. Respect your word roots! (Wait, cyclops means "circular/round hole" in greek?) $\endgroup$
    – Yakk
    Commented Jul 18, 2017 at 17:48
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Despite Will's excellent answer, I feel compelled to answer myself as I had asked this question only a couple days before in biology and the question excited me too. Our body is built to have multiple check's in place to aid us. Think about all the people blind in one eye in the world. They all are able to easily walk and judge depth due to several checks we have in place:

Focal length: If you try to look at something very close to you and then something very far away, you'll notice your vision gets a bit blurry as your eye must refocus. A single eye would be able to tell the distance of an object by judging how much it has to refocus to see an object.

Prior knowledge: If you know the height of some object, you can use it relatively guess its distance and the objects around it.

Relative speeds: Closer objects move faster than farther objects and this can be used to judge speed. For example, when a car is coming towards you, at a distance it seems to be going slow. However by the time it reaches you, it (visually) moves very fast. Your brain combines the change in speed and size of the object to judge its depth.

Perspective: Parallel lines converge at a distance of infinity. Our brains instinctually uses this to measure depth. For example, a path narrows as it gets farther from you. Your brain automatically uses this to tell that the path is getting farther from you.

There are even more ways our brain registers such things which can be found here as Krause showed me.

But... nothing is perfect. Of course a cyclops can be fooled. However, so can humans as we see with the countless optical illusions that artists often like to draw up. An interesting optical illusion is an Ames Room that I recently learned about. It tricks your depth perception and might be an interesting thing to look into.

Great question!

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    $\begingroup$ As an example of Focal Length changes, check out the Unioc alien race in Schlock Mercenary: ovalkwiki.com/Unioc $\endgroup$
    – Nzall
    Commented Jul 17, 2017 at 13:20
  • $\begingroup$ But the Ames Room only works because we don't get stereoscopic vision of the room, right? $\endgroup$ Commented Jul 17, 2017 at 16:05
  • $\begingroup$ @ArturoTorresSánchez Yes. It could also be argued that any illusion is only an illusion because of some restraint on the viewer whether that restraint be on their perspective, knowledge, etc. But yea, you're right :) $\endgroup$ Commented Jul 17, 2017 at 18:17
  • $\begingroup$ The prior knowledge one has been speculated as a factor increasing the risk of children in road accidents. Drivers tend to think they are further away than they are due to their size. $\endgroup$
    – Tim B
    Commented Jul 18, 2017 at 10:27
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Humans have about two dozen different methods for judging the distance to an object. Only two of them (stereopsis, the relative shift of an object against the background, and convergence, the amount of inward shifting needed to center the object in both eyes' field of view) depend on having two eyes.

Your cyclops has the following techniques for judging the distance to an object:

  • Accomodation: the amount of focal shift needed to bring the object into focus. If your cyclops has the stereotypical single huge eye, it will be far better than humans at judging distance this way.
  • Motion parallax: the degree to which an object moves against the background as the cyclops moves its head.
  • Aerial perspective: for distant objects, this is the degree to which the object changes color as a result of atmospheric effects.
  • Size: the distance to an object of a known size can be determined by how small it looks.

In addition, there are about a dozen techniques (perspective, occlusion, relative size, and so on) for determining the relative distance of two objects.

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    $\begingroup$ To follow up on this, I have one short-sighted eye and one "normal" eye. I wore a gas-permeable contact lens briefly as a child, but it is only within the last 2 years (I'm now 43) that I've started wearing contact lenses again, now my "good" eye is becoming less good and the lenses are a better fit for my eyes. I spent 20 years driving with only one working eye, and I can personally testify that perspective and accomodation were my primary distance-judging methods. And they worked perfectly. $\endgroup$
    – Graham
    Commented Jul 17, 2017 at 16:39
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For anyone interested, to expound upon Will's answer, it was discovered in 2011 that birds use something called optical flow to determine distance.

In computer vision, optical flow tracks the apparent movement of points as an observer moves through a scene. This picture tracks the position of similar points between two frames in a video. Notice that points farther away appear to not move as much. Points which don't change as much between frames are assumed to be farther away.

Optical Flow

In the experiment, a bird was made to fly between two walls. The walls had either vertical or horizontal stripes. When moving through this hallway, the wall with the vertical stripes would move past the observer, allowing for optical flow tracking. Walls with the horizontal stripes, however, would not not appear to change as the bird flew; in the wild, this would mean that the object was far away (as we saw earlier in the description of optical flow).

It was found that the birds always flew in the middle when both walls (A) had vertical stripes (both eyes could use optical flow tracking). When one wall had horizontal stripes (B and C), however, the bird flew much closer to the wall with these horizontal stripes. Since the pattern didn't appear to change as the bird moved through the hall, the bird assumed that the wall was farther away than it was.

Here, a bird is shown as flying much closer to the horizontal walls, when present.

For those interested, the name of the paper is Optic Flow Cues Guide Flight in Birds. There is also a video which shows them flying.

tl;dr To answer the original question, objects which are closer appear to move more than objects which are farther away. Optical flow tracking would absolutely be a viable method for a cyclops (or any animal with monocular vision) to use to track distance.

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    $\begingroup$ Here's a link to the video of them flying. youtube.com/watch?v=HvGWVSZ9Efc $\endgroup$ Commented Jul 17, 2017 at 15:50
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    $\begingroup$ Gah! <Twitch> "Vertical stripes" that are oriented horizontally makes me angry! Oh, the picture is taken from above. That really bothered me for the longest minute. $\endgroup$ Commented Jul 17, 2017 at 16:15
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There are many options for depth perception without binocular vision, but chameleons are probably your best model for a cyclops. Unlike most animals, chameleons have a separation between their nodal point - the point wherelines connecting points in the scene and corresponding points in the image intersect - and the center of rotation, the point which the eye rotates around. This means that, as a chameleon moves its eye, images on its retina move more if they are closer, letting them determine the distance of objects.

Unlike birds and snakes, which can only achieve depth perception by moving their whole head back and forth, a chameleon - or a cyclops - can achieve depth perception by moving their eye alone.

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As someone who medically lacks depth perception, I can assure you there's several ways your brain learns to automatically compensate:

Scale of distant objects gets matched to the 'known' scale of such objects to roughly get the distance.
Over long distances, atmospheric blur is a real factor.
Overlapping objects can give a good sense of relative distance.
Diverging/converging lines provide perspective.

Truly, how does your depth perception work when viewing something on a flat screen which was shot with one 'eye' (camera)? It really isn't as debilitating as could be thought!

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    $\begingroup$ You're not really "compensating" for anything there. Everyone uses all those cues, with one eye or two. The problem is you are limited to only those cues. So yes, you do have depth perception, but it's inferior to binocular vision and there is nothing you or anyone else can do about it. $\endgroup$
    – Davor
    Commented Jul 17, 2017 at 13:55
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Model an aspect of their sight on what bats and dolphins use for echo location. Normal human sight is completely passive. The eyes only receive light. Echolocation is active. A pulse is emitted, and time to flight from the pulse's return is measured. Have your cyclops emit a brief, bright, possibly infrared or ultraviolet, light whenever he blinks or squints.

This could be worked into part of the action or plot, As the cyclops picks up the huge boulder, and prepares to hurl it, he begins blinking faster and faster as he builds up ranging data. His intended targets become more and more agitated as they know the boulder is coming their way. Also as a countermeasure, those who fight cyclops could carry a jar of hyper-luminescent fireflies who's emanations confound the cyclops' depth perception.

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  • $\begingroup$ You'll never measure TOF for a light pulse biologically. Speed of light in air is 1 nanosecond per foot. But echo-ranging combined with monocular vision is a good idea. Note also that human depth perception goes way down under low-light conditions, because of loss of many depth cues, and because it's hard to focus on what you can barely perceive. Combining your idea with my answer, the Cyclops people would be deadly long-range night hunters. $\endgroup$
    – dmm
    Commented Jul 18, 2017 at 15:05
  • $\begingroup$ The eye would need its own processing power, basically the emitter and transmitter "cones" would be a single set of cells, sitting on top of their own lump of neurons. The processed information gets sent down the optic nerve, rather than the raw data for the brain to process. Even then TOF is probably not doable, but something like a phase shift strategy could work. Really I just liked the idea of the cyclops giving a physical tell that he's getting ready throw. $\endgroup$
    – Nate White
    Commented Jul 18, 2017 at 15:31
  • $\begingroup$ Actually, there is no reason not to just use sound based echolocation. The mammalian brain is more than capable (bats and dolphins), and there are even examples of non-sighted humans being able to do this. The augmentation method doesn't necessarily have to be a visual augmentation method in order for it be be useful. Even better, since the eyeball is basically a fluid filled sack, it could serve the function of a porpoises' "melon". Letting him hear his range information with his eyeball. $\endgroup$
    – Nate White
    Commented Jul 18, 2017 at 15:53
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Adding to what people have said about accommodation: In bright light, our pupils contract. This increases the depth of field, and makes accommodation less useful for judging distance. Our technological response to this is sunglasses. They reduce the light intensity, causing the pupils to dilate, which reduces the depth of field, so your eyes have to focus carefully on what you're looking at. Your Cyclops people could have biological "sunglasses" built into their eye. In addition, you could have their retina be very light sensitive -- lots of rods. This would reduce their visual acuity, so then make their eye large to compensate (like a giant squid's eyes). Using Earth biology, this would limit your Cyclops people's color vision.

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Snakes have an issue with depth perception which they solve through moving their head from side to side while looking at their prey to get an idea of how far away they are. When a snake charmer 'charms' a snake, the snake's dancing is actually them trying to work out how far away the snake charmer is so that they can attack them. The snake charmer moves from side to side as well which stops the snake working out how far away he is and attacking. The playing of the instrument does nothing but to make it look like the charmer is hypnotising the snake with music. Anyway, you cyclopes could work out distance in the same way by rocking side to side and their enemies could avoid attack in a similar way to the snake charmer.

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As an adult who only has one working eye, your answers is Yes, it would completely prevent 'depth perception' as most humans know it. I can tell you that, having never known stereoscopic vision, they will have adapted to the same kinds of ways I use, whether to navigate a crowded room, drive a car or catch a Frisbee... comparative size, depth of field, many of the other methods mentioned in the excellent answers above.

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There are many humans that only have the use of one eye (myself included), yet do not struggle significantly with depth perception. There are many ways to judge depth other than using multiple eyes with a baseline between them. Size, parallel lines, shadows, discolouration (scattering) are just a few of the many techniques all humans use subconsciously in conjunction with bi-angulation. People with only one eye are forced to rely on these other techniques more heavily but the situations in which you are observing withing without reference to aid you judgement and depth of field actually matters are very limited. Okay, maybe being a pilot is ill advised, but beyond that. Besides ranging devices are not uncommon and could easily be built in to things like planes (which I'm sure they already are).

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I'd like to think that cyclops have no problems with depth perceptions because their eyes have multiple lens or irises; pretty sure their eye construction would be different. One has to ask why nature would favor a creature with one eye. If the single eye is just some strange mutation then there should be some amazing property of it that allows the species to survive.

You could make them a species that lives in low light environments though. There are some cephalopods with large eyes that do this. If you did this then you could make vision a secondary sense and not worry about their ability to see long distance. Just have them hear their way around using echolocation and then survey what's immediately in front of them with their microscope like eyes.

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