BRIEF: Dressmakers See in Super 3-D

BRIEF: Dressmakers See in Super 3-D lead image
amixstudio via shutterstock
(Inside Science) -- Who has the sharpest eyes for distance and depth? You may think it would be surgeons, with their need to precisely manipulate objects in front of them. But according to a new study, the best 3-D vision may actually belong to people who cut and sew fabric, not flesh.
Each of our eyes sees the world from a slightly different angle, providing our brains with a pair of offset images. The differences between those images allow us to calculate how far away things are, granting us 3-D or “stereoscopic” vision. But not everyone’s brain is equally good at translating flat images into a 3-D sense of the world. Past research has found that art students are worse
Some have hypothesized that surgeons and dentists would either develop or innately possess especially good 3-D vision, since they must understand the exact arrangement of a patient’s body parts. But in past studies, dentists
The researchers tested the 3-D vision of 13 professional dressmakers, all of whom had spent substantial amounts of time sewing by hand. Each dressmaker looked into a device that presented stereoscopic images of white lines on a black background. Compared with 21 non-dressmakers, the dressmakers were significantly better at judging how far away the white lines were from each other and from a reference point.
It’s not clear whether people are drawn to dressmaking because they already have super 3-D vision, or whether they start out as ordinary mortals and gain their 3-D flair with practice, according to the researchers. The findings were published Tuesday in Scientific Reports