Temporal aliasing is the term applied to a visual
phenomenon also known as the
stroboscopic effect. It also accounts for the "
wagon-wheel effect", so called because in video or
motion pictures, spoked wheels on horse-drawn wagons sometimes appear to be turning backwards.

Temporal aliasing is one example of a range of phenomena called
aliasing that occur when continuous motion is represented by a series of short or instantaneous samples. It occurs when (a) the view of a moving object is represented by a series of short samples as distinct from a continuous view, and (b) the moving object is in rotational or other cyclic motion at a rate close to the
sampling rate.
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