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So, this guy on youtube said you can see more then 30fps (NSFW)

Mentalguy

The human eye cannot see past 24 fps!!! Why would all movies be in 24 fps then?!?!? Thats right. Your wrong.

In case you were not trolling, saw the first Hobbit in HFR, the difference was huge. Just one example. Not going any further in this. This goes for everyone using 24/30 as an example.

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Isn't it true that the human eye can't see past 60 fps? Then why would people want 120/144 hz monitors?

Humans don't see in fps at all. We never do a complete refresh of our vision. We just process the stuff we're looking at or that is moving. The whole "60fps" human vision thing is untrue. Or the fact you need at least "60fps" to see realistically is also untrue. Just play in what makes you happy and that actually makes a difference for you. Everyone processes what they see differently and as long as you're monitor works for you be it 30, 60, 90 or even 120hz then go for it.
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  • 2 months later...

Help me with a discussion does the human eye only see 30 fps, or how does the him an eye see zbecause I know it's not fps.

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help you with what. human eye is analog, we see constantly.

 

 

our brain processes what we see and around 15 images per second it starts blending them together which makes it look like movement

 

 

There is no limit as to how many frames we can see. Trained pilots can spot a different frame in a video that plays over 200 fps.

 

 

 

The 25th frame in movies was a massive myth because you can spot every single 25th frame if it's different enough.

 

 

 

it says "bullshit" every time it flashes btw

 

 

 

Just show him this 

 

 

http://testufo.com/#test=framerates&count=3&background=none&pps=960

 

or this

 

http://testufo.com/#test=framerates-text&pps=360

 

 

or this

 

http://testufo.com/#test=framerates-marquee

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make 2 1second videos. One being 30 frames of blue , the second one being 30frames of blue and 1 frame of red. If he is able to see the red frame, you are seeing over 30 frames per second.

Planning on trying StarCitizen (Highly recommended)? STAR-NR5P-CJFR is my referal link 

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Our eyes don't work like a camera. What happens is that photons hit protein in our eyes (called opsin) which starts a chemical process resulting in an electrical signal getting sent to our brain and processed. Once that process is over there is a brief period where the opsin have to "recharge" (reverse back to how it was before it was hit by light).

If we were going to define an "FPS" value to human vision I guess we should go with that recharge time. I don't have any solid numbers so take this with a shovel of salt, but I have heard it can take up to 10 minutes for an opsin to recharge. So going by that we could say humans see the world at 1 frame per 10 minutes.

Luckily for us humans however, we got billions of opsins in our eyes and they are not all recharging at the same time. So assuming that each opsin goes off one after another we could see billions of "frames" every second, except each "frame" would only be an extremely tiny dot.

If you want to know about FPS in games and such then higher is better. 30 to 60 is a massive difference. 60 to 120 is less noticeable than 30 to 60 but it's still there. Over that and the difference is harder to spot. It also depends on what you are doing. In a test done by the US Air Force they put their pilots in a dark room and then had an image appear for 1/220th of a second (so, 220 FPS). The pilots not only noticed the image but they could even see what aircraft was in the image. That's not to say that you will notice the difference between 219 and 220 FPS though.

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