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These two terms are often confused by the student. Remember that the filed
of view deals with objects looked at and focus deals with images formed.This
should help you decide on which you are talking about.
Definition:
The range of object distances
for which the circles of confusion are so small that the image is sharp
enough to be considered 'in focus' is called the depth
of field.
Definition:The
range of image distances over
which the image of an improperly focused object is acceptably sharp is
called the depth of focus.
Definition:
The circle
of confusion is
the area of the retina over which the cells are stimulated by light from
a point on an object. The bigger tthe circle, the more blurred the point
becomes. The maximum acceptable circle of confusion determines the depth
of field and focus of an eye.
Decreasing the
pupil size:
increases both the depth of field and the depth of focus.
An eye cannot focus
on objects that are at different distances from it at the same time. Therefore
strictly speaking once the eye has accomodated (adjusted the strength
of the eye-lens) to view an objact at an object distance O from it, it
should only be able to see objacts that are that precise distance away
in focus. However, if the object is almost that distance away the object
forms an image which is acceptably sharp enough for the barain of the
observer to make out enough detail for him/her to class it as in focus.
The depth
of field deals with the range of 'acceptable' object
distances that can be classed as 'in focus' when it is accomodated
to focus on a particular spot.
The diagram below
shows light from a point object at 0 brought to a focus at I
on the retina.

click
on the image to enlarge it
Light from objects
at O1 and O2, is out of focus (but acceptably so!)
and, in each case, covers a circular area of the retina with a diameter
XY instead of being a point image. This is known as the
circle of confusion.
The range of object
distances for which the circles of confusion
are so small that the image is sharp enough to be considered 'in focus'
is called the depth of field.
So if XY is the diameter
of the largest acceptable circle of confusion,
the depth of field is the distance between
O1 and O2,.
Therefore ALL objects
placed between O1 and O2 would be considered to
be in focus by the viewer.

click
on the image to enlarge it
Decreasing
the size of the pupil
(as would happen automatically when viewing an object in bright light
conditions) increases the depth of field
because it decreases the diameter of the circle of confusion - X'Y'the
diagram above is smaller than in XY. This means that O1 and
O2 could be further apart and the eye would still class the
image as 'sharp enough'.
The
depth of field is much greater for distant objects than for nearby objects.
This is because any given change in object distance has a greater effect
on
image distance when the object distance is small than it does when it
is large. (You can check this by drawing simple ray diagrams or by putting
numbers in the lens formula - use the interactive spreadsheet and try
out different object distance ranges). This also explains why O is closer
to O2 than to O1;
Not only do our pupils
get smaller in brigher light conditions they also get smaller as we concentrate
on ever closer objects. This constriction therefore offsets (to some extent)
the decreased depth of field we get when viewing closer objects..
The range of image distances over which the
image of an improperly focused object is acceptably sharp is called the
depth of focus

click
on the image to enlarge it
Decreasing
the size of the pupil increases the depth of focus.
Depth
perception
Monocular (One eye)
vision
A single eye is capable of perceiving depth, or relative distance between
two vied objects, to a certain extent, but preciset judgements, like those
needed to line up two pencil points so that they touch, are difficult.
When only one eye is sending signal to it, the brain relies heavily on
stored past experiences to produce the sensation of depth (it works out
what would be the most probable result!). For example, the apparent size
of a familiar object whose
actual size is known, can lead to a good estimation of its distance from
the eye.
The brain also uses
the overlapping of distant objects by near ones, shadows, reflections,
and the way colour appears different (distant objects appear more blue)
to
interpret depth in a stationary scene - artists use the same techniques
to give depth to their pictures.
When you move your
head, images of close objects move across the retina faster' than those
of distant objects. This 'moving parallax' effect is another mechanism
that is used by the brain to apply depth perception in monocular vision.
Binocular
(Two eye) vision
Using two eyes instead
of one results in larger visual field results. The blind spot and any
disorder of one eye is not critical, and a vastly
improved depth perception is gained.
This is because
of:
convergence
- the visual axes automatically converge on the object studied thus
permitting a judgement of distance.When you look at objects that are
very far away your two eyes point very nearly straight ahead. As objects
come closer (less than about 6 meters or so) your eyes will noticeably
turn in (converge). The nearer objects are to you the more your eyes
will turn towards your nose. This eye position is called convergence.
Look at a friend's
eyes as you hold your finger in front of him or her and move it towards
the nose. You will see the eyes converge. (see diagram on the right
- the 'red' eye pair is focusing on a closer object therefore
they 'turn in' more than the 'green' eye pair.
stereopsis
(stereoscopic vision) - the eyes are separated by about 7cm and
therefore 'see' slightly different views of a scene (look at it from
differing angles - see the picture on the left). The brain then 'combines'
these two different images to form a three-dimensional view of the world.
This is important for everyday tasks and especially important for sportsmen/women.
The ability of the
eye to distinguish between two objects at different distances depends
on the difference in the visual angle subtended by the two objects, the
minimum discernible angle being about half a minute (remember there are
sixty minutes in a degree!). Hence, depth perception decreases with distance,
vanishing altogether beyond a certain distance (the stereoscopic range)
which is normally about 60 m.
If you look at the
diagram on the left and consider the tiny size of d' compared to d you
can appreciate how small angle q will be.
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