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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Sat Feb 21, 2015, 11:44pm
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Thank you for clarifying. Perhaps the OP will return and answer the questions you've posed.
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Old Sun Feb 22, 2015, 12:58pm
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Originally Posted by Nevadaref View Post
Thank you for clarifying. Perhaps the OP will return and answer the questions you've posed.
I checked the clock WHEN I started my count. I saw 5.3. I counted to 5 and blew my whistle at which point we realized the clock had stopped prematurely.
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Old Sun Feb 22, 2015, 01:00pm
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Originally Posted by kk13 View Post
I checked the clock WHEN I started my count. I saw 5.3. I counted to 5 and blew my whistle at which point we realized the clock had stopped prematurely.
Good job.
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Old Sun Feb 22, 2015, 01:06pm
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Clock glance.

Great job.
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  #5 (permalink)  
Old Sun Feb 22, 2015, 08:02pm
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Originally Posted by kk13 View Post
I checked the clock WHEN I started my count. I saw 5.3. I counted to 5 and blew my whistle at which point we realized the clock had stopped prematurely.
Exactly what you are supposed to do.
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Old Sun Feb 22, 2015, 08:40pm
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Originally Posted by kk13 View Post
I checked the clock WHEN I started my count. I saw 5.3. I counted to 5 and blew my whistle at which point we realized the clock had stopped prematurely.
I want to know how u saw exactly 5.3 on a running clock. That's amazing!
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Old Sun Feb 22, 2015, 09:33pm
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Originally Posted by Coach Bill View Post
I want to know how u saw exactly 5.3 on a running clock. That's amazing!
For approximately .1 second the clock says 5.3, are you honestly saying you have never seen any digit in the .1 second it was on the clock? Is it just a blur when you look at the tenths digit when its running?
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Old Sun Feb 22, 2015, 10:25pm
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Originally Posted by BDevil15 View Post
For approximately .1 second the clock says 5.3, are you honestly saying you have never seen any digit in the .1 second it was on the clock? Is it just a blur when you look at the tenths digit when its running?
No, I can see the digits quickly scrolling by.... Signals from the eye take about a tenth of a second to reach the brain. The blink of an eye is approximately two tenths of a second. When I go from looking away at my running timer on my phone and then glance at it, I can pinpoint it to a small range (maybe within .3 seconds), but I can't tell you exactly to the tenth of a second. The official has to see that the ball is at the disposal of the inbounder, glance at the running clock, and start the count. To say for certain it was exactly at 5.3 is not humanly possible. If his brain registers 5.3, then it was at least 5.4. That's the only point I'm trying to make. I would still ask the table when they stopped the clock, and not immediately go to 0.3.
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Old Sun Feb 22, 2015, 10:28pm
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Originally Posted by Coach Bill View Post
... I would still ask the table when they stopped the clock, and not immediately go to 0.3.
They stopped it at 1.6 seconds.
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Old Sun Feb 22, 2015, 10:45pm
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Originally Posted by BadNewsRef View Post
They stopped it at 1.6 seconds.
I know. 1.6 is weird, right? I think maybe they stopped it after the basket by mistake at 5.3, that is why the official is so adamant he saw exactly 5.3, and then the timer said oops, i wasn't supposed to stop it, and started it again, and then stopped it on his 5-second count whistle. I would like to hear more of the conversation with the table.
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Old Sun Feb 22, 2015, 11:49pm
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Originally Posted by Coach Bill View Post
No, I can see the digits quickly scrolling by.... Signals from the eye take about a tenth of a second to reach the brain. The blink of an eye is approximately two tenths of a second. When I go from looking away at my running timer on my phone and then glance at it, I can pinpoint it to a small range (maybe within .3 seconds), but I can't tell you exactly to the tenth of a second. The official has to see that the ball is at the disposal of the inbounder, glance at the running clock, and start the count. To say for certain it was exactly at 5.3 is not humanly possible. If his brain registers 5.3, then it was at least 5.4. That's the only point I'm trying to make. I would still ask the table when they stopped the clock, and not immediately go to 0.3.
(from Wikipedia)
The human eye and its brain interface, the human visual system, can process 10 to 12 separate images per second, perceiving them individually.

[1] The threshold of human visual perception varies depending on what is being measured. When looking at a lighted display, people begin to notice a brief interruption of darkness if it is about 16 milliseconds or longer.

[2] Observers can recall one specific image in an unbroken series of different images, each of which lasts as little as 13 milliseconds.

Coach, it seems the ascertion regarding 10-12 visual images processed per second by a human brain, is modified by element [2], which explains why/how it is possible to perceive the presentation of individual tenths on the clock.
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Old Mon Feb 23, 2015, 09:16am
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I also think (no scientific evidence) that there's a difference between the lighted segments / light bulbs on a stadium clock and the lcds used on a phone in terms of being able to see individual digits.
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Old Mon Feb 23, 2015, 01:43pm
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Originally Posted by Rob1968 View Post
(from Wikipedia)
The human eye and its brain interface, the human visual system, can process 10 to 12 separate images per second, perceiving them individually.

[1] The threshold of human visual perception varies depending on what is being measured. When looking at a lighted display, people begin to notice a brief interruption of darkness if it is about 16 milliseconds or longer.

[2] Observers can recall one specific image in an unbroken series of different images, each of which lasts as little as 13 milliseconds.

Coach, it seems the ascertion regarding 10-12 visual images processed per second by a human brain, is modified by element [2], which explains why/how it is possible to perceive the presentation of individual tenths on the clock.
I'm not arguing that you can't see the tenths. You can. But, even, your post states that the human eye can process 10 to 12 separate images per second. That's about 1/10 second. So, if you see 5.3, it was 5.4 at the time. And, I think that's the best you can do. I would argue that with all the stuff going on in the official's peripheral vision that he needs to pay attention to during that quick glance, it is more likely that the margin of error is greater than 1/10 second. Not to mention, he probably glanced at the scoreboard clock about 90 feet away, which might also be a factor.
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Old Mon Feb 23, 2015, 04:39pm
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Originally Posted by kk13 View Post
I checked the clock WHEN I started my count. I saw 5.3. I counted to 5 and blew my whistle at which point we realized the clock had stopped prematurely.
I think the question is this - how did you definitively see exactly 5.3 on a clock that was moving.
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Old Mon Feb 23, 2015, 04:45pm
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Originally Posted by MD Longhorn View Post
I think the question is this - how did you definitively see exactly 5.3 on a clock that was moving.

I would say the words definitively and exactly are not the most appropriate. The answer to your question is: "I did the best I could."
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