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Used to find best viewing distance or target separation |

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A carrot with red and green parts provides a check on suppressions. |

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These rings are especially useful in developing peripheral stereopsis. They may be used with a number of slides and slide combination. |

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These rings are especially useful in developing peripheral stereopsis. They may be used with a number of slides and slide combination. |

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Panda and bear move in opposite directions. Useful in developing speed and accuracy of perception. |

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Used for suppression training in conjunction with almost any slide combination desired. |

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Rings may be moved in same or opposite directions to develop gross or refined stereopsis. |

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Very effective means of eliciting stereopsis in the exam. Aids in developing quick stereo judgment. |

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Often used with "circle" slides shown above as a reference point for stereo judgments. |

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Space ship and ring move in opposite directions. Combines central and peripheral training. |

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Especially useful with a form of cheiroscopic tracing in the rehabilitation of amblyopes. |

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Has a pronounced three-dimensional effect. Widely used for hand-eye coordination training. |

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Used with picture slides for para-macular fusion and plane of reference in stereo training. |

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Photoscene (in both green and red) has pronounced 3-D qualities, offers many training possibilities. |

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A binocular fixation target used with other slides to help develop precise spatial judgments. |

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This transparent sheet is used as a performance check on stereopsis and to detect malingering.
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