Efficiency Observers' performance in recognizing the figure present in a stereogram in the presence of statistical noise has been found to be higher for a stereogram that consists in black and white dots on a grey background compared to a similar stereogram with only white (or only black) dots on a grey background.
Autostereograms The name
random dot stereogram specifically refers to
pairs of images based on random dots. Additional work by
Christopher Tyler and Maureen Clarke led to their inventing single images yielding depth without a stereoscope. These are known as single image random dot stereograms (SIRDS), or random dot autostereograms. Replacing the random dot base pattern with an image or texture gives the form that made the single image stereogram known to the general public, through the
Magic Eye series of books.
Dynamic random dot stereograms Dynamic random-dot stereograms consist of a moving stereoscopic (cyclopean) form made of moving random dots, camouflaged by further random dots. The observer is to make a perceptual judgment about the shape and/or motion of the
dichoptically presented moving form. When presented with a dynamic random dot stereogram with
stereoscopic (cyclopean) motion stimuli, stereoscopic motion is perceived by persons with normal
binocular vision and more generally by those who have sufficient binocular vision for the task. Dynamic random-dot stereograms containing binocular motion stimuli can be designed to test whether someone has at least rudimentary stereopsis. One study found that in
strabismic patients a dynamic random dot stereogram yielded a significantly higher rate detection rate for
stereopsis than the
Titmus fly stereotest. ==Illustrated example==