Memphis, TN – (February 13, 2007) – Dr. Scott Steinman, a Professor
at the Southern College of Optometry, has written over 40 interactive
applications in REALbasic that are used in the classroom for his
courses in vision science. These courses train future eye doctors in
neurophysiology, psychophysics and disorders of the visual pathways,
eye movements and binocular vision. His REALbasic programs include:
1. Simulations of visual neuronal responses, binocular visual
processing, color vision, motion perception, and abnormal spatial
vision.
2. Simulations of clinical tests of eye movement paralyses and color
vision anomalies.
3. Demonstrations of color, brightness, spatial, temporal, motion and
binocular perceptual phenomena and aftereffects.
4. Simulations of classical experiments in visual perception.
5. Simulations of Fourier analysis, spatial filtering and the
construction of counterphase gratings.
6. Simulations of eye movement recording.
7. Ray tracing through thin and thick lenses.
8. Research software for measuring motion processing deficits in
glaucoma and acuity in cataract patients.
Dr. Steinman has been programming since 1982. His educational and
research software has been featured on the web sites of Apple Inc.
(Science and Engineering site), National Instruments, and Tin Rocket,
makers of REALbasic plugins. Dr. Steinman has been a lecturer at
REAL World, an author for RBLibrary, has written textbooks on
computer programming and vision science, and has illustrated four
textbooks.
Information about Dr. Steinman's software can be found at the
Software In Motion web site: http://www.software-in-motion.com
Contact Information:
Scott Steinman, O.D., Ph.D., F.A.A.O.
Software In Motion
http://www.software-in-motion.com
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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