Date:

Victorian Age technology can improve virtual reality

Virtual and augmented reality have the potential to profoundly impact our society, but the technologies have a few bugs to work out to better simulate realistic visual experience.

Now, researchers at Dartmouth College and Stanford University have discovered that “monovision” — a simple technique borrowed from ophthalmology that dates to the monocle of the Victorian Age – can improve user performance in virtual reality environments.

- Advertisement -

Virtual and augmented reality provide a unique platform for entertainment, education, collaborative work, basic vision research and other uses. But these displays still need to overcome technical and perceptual issues to provide high-quality and immersive user experiences. In particular, one long-standing challenge has been the mismatch between convergence and accommodation – or the visual cues that our eye muscles send to our brains as our eyes fixate and focus on objects in 3D – that are inherent to most stereoscopic displays.

A collaboration between electrical engineers at Stanford and a perceptual scientist at Dartmouth has examined how novel optical configurations can improve user experience and performance in virtual reality. Using the Oculus Rift VR headset, the research team created a prototype system with focus-tunable liquid lenses allowing for a range of optical modifications. On the one hand, this prototype allowed for creating adaptive focus cues, which resulted in higher user preferences and better performance in virtual reality. On the other hand, the system also allowed for testing of an extremely low-tech modification that leverages monovision, a technique that allows each eye of an observer to focus to a different distance. While the monovision technique is common practice in ophthalmology, the Stanford-Dartmouth team is the first to report its effectiveness for VR applications with a custom built set up.

“My lab has been conducting research on computational near-eye display optics for a few years now, and tapping into the wealth of techniques commonly used in ophthalmology and by vision science is key for delivering better experiences with virtual reality systems,” says co-author Gordon Wetzstein, an assistant professor of Electrical Engineering at Stanford.

“In addition to showing how adaptive focus can be implemented and can improve virtual reality optics, our studies reveal that monovision can also improve user performance in terms of reaction times and accuracy, particularly when simulating objects that are relatively close to the user,” says lead author Robert Konrad, a graduate researcher at Stanford.

- Advertisement -

Co-author Emily Cooper, a research assistant professor in Dartmouth’s Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, adds: “Practical optical solutions for virtual reality are crucial to moving this technology to increasingly more comfortable and immersive experiences. Our work shows that monovision has the potential to be one such solution.”

DARTMOUTH COLLEGE

- Advertisement -
spot_img
Mark Milligan
Mark Milligan
Mark Milligan is multi-award-winning journalist and the Managing Editor at HeritageDaily. His background is in archaeology and computer science, having written over 8,000 articles across several online publications. Mark is a member of the Association of British Science Writers (ABSW), the World Federation of Science Journalists, and in 2023 was the recipient of the British Citizen Award for Education, the BCA Medal of Honour, and the UK Prime Minister's Points of Light Award.
spot_img

Mobile Application

spot_img

Related Articles

Underwater archaeologists find 112 glassware objects off Bulgaria’s coast

A team of underwater archaeologists from the Regional Historical Museum Burgas have recovered 112 glass objects from Chengene Skele Bay, near Burgas, Bulgaria.

Bronze Age axe found off Norway’s east coast

Archaeologists from the Norwegian Maritime Museum have discovered a Bronze Age axe off the coast of Arendal in the Skagerrak strait.

Traces of Bahrain’s lost Christian community found in Samahij

Archaeologists from the University of Exeter, in collaboration with the Bahrain Authority for Culture and Antiquities, have discovered the first physical evidence of a long-lost Christian community in Samahij, Bahrain.

Archaeologists uncover preserved wooden elements from Neolithic settlement

Archaeologists have discovered wooden architectural elements at the La Draga Neolithic settlement.

Pyramid of the Moon marked astronomical orientation axis of Teōtīhuacān

Teōtīhuacān, loosely translated as "birthplace of the gods," is an ancient Mesoamerican city situated in the Teotihuacan Valley, Mexico.

Anglo-Saxon cemetery discovered in Malmesbury

Archaeologists have discovered an Anglo-Saxon cemetery in the grounds of the Old Bell Hotel in Malmesbury, England.

Musket balls from “Concord Fight” found in Massachusetts

Archaeologists have unearthed five musket balls fired during the opening battle of the Revolutionary War at Minute Man National Historical Park in Concord, United States.

3500-year-old ritual table found in Azerbaijan

Archaeologists from the University of Catania have discovered a 3500-year-old ritual table with the ceramic tableware still in...