Of course the human eye doesn't work with frames, the whole frames thing is used to 'trick' the eye into seeing a moving picture. The brain can detect incredibly minor changes in fast moving images, but generally 50+ FPS is what's required to create a smooth moving image.
Famously movies run at 24fps, but they flash the projector bulb twice for each frame, meaning it's actually closer to 50 fps. This is an easy method, but not fool proof as it causes some inconsistencies, such as when the camera pans in a cinema theatre it makes the movie look very jumpy. I'm sure most everyone has noticed this, and when you do it's because you're looking at the true 24 fps.
Really 60fps is just the minimum it takes to trick a human brain into thinking that it's looking at a perfectly smooth moving picture. Anything less than 50 just breaks the illusion.
Famously movies run at 24fps, but they flash the projector bulb twice for each frame, meaning it's actually closer to 50 fps. This is an easy method, but not fool proof as it causes some inconsistencies, such as when the camera pans in a cinema theatre it makes the movie look very jumpy. I'm sure most everyone has noticed this, and when you do it's because you're looking at the true 24 fps.
Really 60fps is just the minimum it takes to trick a human brain into thinking that it's looking at a perfectly smooth moving picture. Anything less than 50 just breaks the illusion.