Study Of The Perception Of Three-Dimensional Spatial Relations For A Volumetric Display

Study Of The Perception Of Three-Dimensional Spatial Relations For A Volumetric Display
Christoph M Hoffmann, Zygmunt Pizlo, Voicu S Popescu, and Paul Rosen
Journal of Electronic Imaging, 2006

Abstract

We test perception of 3-D spatial relations in 3-D images rendered by a 3-D display and compare it to that of a high-resolution flat panel display. Our 3-D display is a device that renders a 3-D image by displaying, in rapid succession, radial slices through the scene on a rotating screen. The image is contained in a glass globe and can be viewed from virtually any direction. We conduct a psychophysical experiment where objects with varying complexity are used as stimuli. On each trial, an object or a distorted version is shown at an arbitrary orientation. The subject’s task is to decide whether or not the object is distorted under several viewing conditions (monocular/binocular, with/without motion parallax, and near/far). The subject’s performance is measured by the detectability d’, a conventional dependent variable in signal detection experiments. Highest d’ values are measured for the 3-D display when the subject is allowed to walk around the display.

Downloads

Download the Paper Download the BiBTeX

Citation

Christoph M Hoffmann, Zygmunt Pizlo, Voicu S Popescu, and Paul Rosen. Study Of The Perception Of Three-Dimensional Spatial Relations For A Volumetric Display. Journal of Electronic Imaging, 2006.

Bibtex


@article{hoffmann2006study,
  title = {Study of the Perception of Three-Dimensional Spatial Relations for a
    Volumetric Display},
  author = {Hoffmann, Christoph M and Pizlo, Zygmunt and Popescu, Voicu S and Rosen,
    Paul},
  journal = {Journal of Electronic Imaging},
  volume = {15},
  pages = {033002},
  year = {2006},
  abstract = {We test perception of 3-D spatial relations in 3-D images rendered by a 3-D
    display and compare it to that of a high-resolution flat panel display. Our 3-D display
    is a device that renders a 3-D image by displaying, in rapid succession, radial slices
    through the scene on a rotating screen. The image is contained in a glass globe and can
    be viewed from virtually any direction. We conduct a psychophysical experiment where
    objects with varying complexity are used as stimuli. On each trial, an object or a
    distorted version is shown at an arbitrary orientation. The subject's task is to decide
    whether or not the object is distorted under several viewing conditions
    (monocular/binocular, with/without motion parallax, and near/far). The subject's
    performance is measured by the detectability d', a conventional dependent variable in
    signal detection experiments. Highest d' values are measured for the 3-D display when
    the subject is allowed to walk around the display.}
}