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Fahle & DeLuca [19] dichoptically presented two verniers of opposite orientation moving towards each other and found that subjects perceived a single vernier oriented in three-dimensional space, moving either away from the subjects or toward them.
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Yet both writers seem to perceive a single enemy, "Middle Eastern terrorists," behind that attack and those since.
When similar sounds come to a listener from two different directions with the same level and small time difference (0 2 ms), he/she perceives a single sound image and its position changes from the middle of two sound sources for no time difference between two sounds to the direction of the leading sound with increasing time difference.
This is exactly the perception that Onionlab's new visual masterpiece takes on with Diplopia, a "stereoscopic piece" that points out how "our eyes merge two separate images to perceive a single object".
It is remarkable that, most of the time, we perceive a single image of the world despite each eye having its own unique retinal image [1].
Moreover, when people are simply asked whether they perceive a single cue or several cues they give answers that intuitively make a lot of sense: if two events are close to each other in space, time, and structure, subjects tend to perceive a single underlying cause, while if they are far away from one another subjects tend to infer two independent causes [15], [16].
The presence of a single axis of motion in the visual field would most commonly be caused by an eye or head movement, which may explain the visual system's preference for perceiving a single axis of motion in dynamic dot quartet arrays.
Furthermore, if one is interested in small distinct peaks, it happens only rarely that two such peaks meet due to a distortion and mislead the viewer into perceiving a single, wider peak.
In support of this assumption, event related potential's (ERP) findings show that small quantities (1-4/3) are perceived as a single individual object, while large quantities are perceived as cardinal values [ 29].
In the brain, the separate images are perceived as a single overall image.
This is a unique and treasurable trait inherent in the genre – that the human race is perceived as a single entity, undivided".
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com