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Why was it very difficult to capture the speed of a running dog or the intensity of raindrops dropping in a puddle prior to the...Question
Why was it very difficult to capture the speed of a running dog or the intensity of raindrops dropping in a puddle prior to the advances of modern photography?
(1 point)
Responses
The human brain cannot process movement to capture it.
The human brain cannot process movement to capture it.
It is impossible to show motion with oil paints.
It is impossible to show motion with oil paints.
They moved too fast for the human eye.
They moved too fast for the human eye.
They moved too slow for the human eye.
(1 point)
Responses
The human brain cannot process movement to capture it.
The human brain cannot process movement to capture it.
It is impossible to show motion with oil paints.
It is impossible to show motion with oil paints.
They moved too fast for the human eye.
They moved too fast for the human eye.
They moved too slow for the human eye.
Answers
There are no human answers yet.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct response is: **They moved too fast for the human eye.**
Prior to the advances in modern photography, capturing fast movements like a running dog or the intensity of raindrops was challenging because the human eye perceives motion in a continuous flow rather than as discrete moments, making it difficult to capture those fleeting instances accurately.
Prior to the advances in modern photography, capturing fast movements like a running dog or the intensity of raindrops was challenging because the human eye perceives motion in a continuous flow rather than as discrete moments, making it difficult to capture those fleeting instances accurately.
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