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The human visual system integrates line segments into subjectively perceived surfaces. (1982 Melvin L. Prueitt)
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Richard F. Voss used fractal geometry to produce a very realistic scene. (1982 Benoit B. Mandelbrot, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center)
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"Artic Twilight." Experimenting around with an erosion program. (1982 Melvin L. Prueitt)
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"Concession to Scifi." There are number of ways to create abstract art with a computer. (1980 Darcy Gerbarg)
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"Vanishing Essence." The reason that these plates are effective in producing a pleasant picture is that our visual systems are able to connect them together into unified curving surfaces. (1983 Melvin L. Prueitt)
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Vibeke Sorenson's computer graphics design class in the Department of Communication Arts and Design at the Virginia Commonwealth University found that home computers could produce colorful patterns.
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This was produced by James Squires as a graduate student using a Chromatics 7900 in the Fine Arts Department of UCLA.
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"Rainbow Valley." The stripes in the rainbow actually consist of bent tubes. (1982 Melvin L. Prueitt)
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