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Do human eyes have image stabilization?

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Mechanically, your eye has muscles around it that keep it quite stable in space, and these muscles are coordinated both with the image you see and with the muscles in your neck to turn the eye in whatever direction is necessary to keep the image from moving around the retina too much. read more

In-body image stabilization requires the lens to have a larger output image circle because the sensor is moved during exposure and thus uses a larger part of the image. Compared to lens movements in optical image stabilization systems the sensor movements are quite large, so the effectiveness is limited by the maximum range of sensor movement, where a typical modern optically-stabilized lens has greater freedom. read more

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