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3-D Images Created From a Single Lens

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CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Aug. 6, 2013 — A computational method called light-field moment imaging creates 3-D images using a single, stationary lens, a discovery that could have implications for medical imaging and even future 3-D displays. Principal investigator Kenneth B. Crozier, an associate professor at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), and graduate student Antony Orth discovered that by taking two images from the same camera position and focusing them at different depths, a 3-D image can be stitched together. The slight differences between the two images can provide enough information for a...Read full article

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    Published: August 2013
    cameras3-DAmericasAntony OrthbiomedicineBiophotonicsConsumerDisplaysfilmHarvardHarvard School of Engineering and Applied SciencesImagingKenneth B. Crozierlight-field moment imagingMassachusettsMicroscopymoviesResearch & TechnologySEASSoftware

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