Kenneth N. Ogle

Kenneth N. Ogle (1902-1968) was a scientist of human vision. Born in Colorado, he earned a bachelor's degree from Colorado College in 1925 and a Ph.D. from Dartmouth College in 1930. He was later awarded an honorary medical degree by the University of Uppsala in Sweden.

He spent much of his working life at the Dartmouth Eye Institute, to which he was appointed by Adelbert Ames, Jr.. He made significant contributions to the understanding of human binocular vision. In 1967, he won the Tillyer Medal, awarded by the Optical Society of America. He died less than two months after retiring from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, where he had begun working as a consultant in 1947.

Selected Bibliography
Ogle, K. N. (1950). Researchers in binocular vision. New York: Hafner Publishing Company.

Ogle, K. N. (1953). Precision and validity in stereoscopic depth perception from double images. Journal of the Optical Society of America, 43, 906-913.

Ogle, K. N. (1962). Ocular dominance and binocular retinal rivalry. In H. Davson (Ed.), Visual optics and the optical space sense: Vol. 4 (pp. 409-417). New York: Academic Press.

Lowe, S. W., & Ogle, K. N. (1966). Dynamics of the pupil during binocular rivalry. Archives of Ophthalmology, 75, 395.

Ogle, K. N. (1967). On Binocular Rivalry, by W. J. M. Levelt (Book Review). Contemporary Psychology, 12, 340.

Ogle, K. N. (1967). Some aspects of stereoscopic depth perception. Journal of the Optical Society of America, 57, 1073-1081.

Ogle, K. N., & Wakefield, J. M. (1967). Stereoscopic depth and binocular rivalry. Vision Research, 7, 89-98.

[[Category:Ophthalmologists]