Light field photography
(Redirected from Integral photography)
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Integral photography, also known as light field photography, is a form of photography that captures the angles of light on a surface and its brightness. It is for capturing light fields.
Light field photographs capture not just flat pixels, but rays of light.[1]
In order to overcome vergence-acommodation conflict, there need to be more than 100 separate views per eye.
There need to be a high number of lenses, and a high number of images under each lens.
History[edit]
- Gabriel Lippman
- Eugène Estanave
- Herbert E. Ives
- M. Henry Jones
- Roger Lannes de Montebello