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VegitableChicken

How do we know that it's because of the camera's frame rate, not us?

Lockbrains

This is interesting. I think human eyes also have frame rate, so this kind of effect might occur in daily life (?)

Max

@VegitableChicken well, you could look at it frame-by-frame and try to reconstruct the motion instead of watching it as a video.

@Lockbrains the human eye has no discrete 'frame rate,' but faster moving objects become blurrier due to persistence of vision. This won't create under-sampling artifacts - it's more like an averaging of a temporal window of continuous data.

RyuK

Is the average voltage experienced by a device connected to a PWM is also an example of Aliasing?

ruochen2

It is interesting to see it changing again and again

weiyuc

Sometimes it also happens because of illumination frequency...

Lavender

I don't think the average voltage experienced by a device connected to a PWM is an example of temporal aliasing

wenere

It's interesting we do have limits on eyes.