Yes, the red and gray is normal, but you're seeing the combined channels.   You need the glasses to separate the channels. Try viewing the image with the glasses that come with a 3D comic book.


    -- Greg


On 9/21/2020 11:43 PM, Michael Elbaum wrote:
Red-cyan, sorry. No, I didn't look for stereo at all, just to reproduce the condition posted that one channel appears in red and the other in gray. Is that normal?
Michael

From: Greg Couch <gregc@cgl.ucsf.edu>
Sent: Tuesday, September 22, 2020 4:57:50 AM
To: Michael Elbaum <michael.elbaum@weizmann.ac.il>
Subject: Re: [Chimera-users] Stereo Red Cyan
 

Are you wearing red-cyan glasses to see the stereo?  It doesn't work without them.


    -- Greg


On 9/21/2020 1:08 PM, Michael Elbaum wrote:

I'm confirming the problem with a different dataset (optical deconvolution in tif format). Red-green shows red and gray, green-magenta shows green and gray. This is with version 1.14 on linux.

regards,
Michael




From: Chimera-users <chimera-users-bounces@cgl.ucsf.edu> on behalf of Angus McDonald <amcdonald@boisestate.edu>
Sent: Monday, September 21, 2020 9:46:24 PM
To: chimera-users@cgl.ucsf.edu BB
Subject: [Chimera-users] Stereo Red Cyan
 
I am looking at some cryo em data. When I try to view a a 3D stack of em dat with the Red-Cyan stereo setting I seem to only get Red and grayscale. The data is in 32-bit floating point and is in MRC2014 header format. I cannot figure out what I am doing wrong. Is anything obvious? 

Thanks for your time.



--
Angus McDonald
 

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