Create your own abstract art inspired by Béla Julesz. It's free and easy to get started!


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SDXL 1.0
Around 1956, Julesz began at Bell Labs on a project to detect patterns in the output of random number generators. He decided to try mapping the numbers into images and using the pattern-detecting capabilities of the human visual system to look for a lack of randomness.Julesz noticed that two identical random images when viewed through a stereoscope, appeared as if they were projected onto a uniform flat surface. He experimented with the image pair by shifting a square area in the center of one of the images by a small amount. When he viewed this pair through the stereoscope, the square appeared to rise out from the page. (Wikipedia, "Random dot stereogram")
This image depicts a stereoscopic image pair experiment. When viewed through a stereoscope, a square appears to rise from the page due to a slight shift in one image's central area.
Created by fnord on Nov 11, 2023 using the SDXL 1.0 AI image generator model.
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