leaf room

room, leaf 

A cubical box, about 2 metres square, with its walls vertical and one open side. The interior surfaces are covered with artificial leaves of various sizes, which stick out in a random manner. An observer looking binocularly into the room from the centre of the open side will see its cubical shape due to stereopsis. However, monocularly the room appears almost flat as the mon-ocular cues to depth perception are almost completely eliminated in this room. The leaf room is used to detect and measure spatial distortions resulting from aniseikonia. It can also be used to demonstrate spatial distortion using meridional size lenses. See aniseikonic lens; depth perception.
Millodot: Dictionary of Optometry and Visual Science, 7th edition. © 2009 Butterworth-Heinemann
References in periodicals archive ?
When the leaf room is finished, it may be covered in so much silk that it looks like a cocoon!
Finished leaf rooms are used by the whole colony for protection.
As the queen lays eggs, workers carry them to other leaf rooms. There, more workers care for the eggs, larvae, and pupae.