Stereoblindness

[1] Also, purely binocular motion stimuli appear to influence stereoblind persons' sensation of self-motion.

[2] Furthermore, in some cases each eye can contribute to peripheral vision for one side of the field of view (see also monofixation syndrome).

[citation needed] It has been suggested that Dutch Old Master Rembrandt may have been stereoblind, which would have aided him in flattening what he saw for the production of 2D works.

[3][4] Scientists have suggested that more artists seem to have stereoblindness when compared with a sample of people with stereo-acuteness (normal stereo vision).

[6] His loss of stereo vision was recounted in his book The Mind's Eye, published in October 2010.