Catching the Eye
Monday, 22 July 9:00 AM - 10:30 AM
Session Chair: Craig Barnes, Navteq
Monday, 22 July 9:00 AM - 10:30 AM
Session Chair: Craig Barnes, Navteq
Near-eye light field displays depict sharp images by synthesizing light fields corresponding to virtual scenes located within a viewer's natural accommodation range. We optimize optical trade-offs between resolution, field of view, and form factor and demonstrate a thin, lightweight HMD prototype, containing a pair of microlens-covered OLEDs.
Douglas Lanman
NVIDIA Research
David Luebke
NVIDIA Research
A survey and user evaluation of tone-mapping operators for HDR video that classify the operators based on their intent and evaluate them using high-quality HDR-video sequences.
Gabriel Eilertsen
Linköpings universitet
Jonas Unger
Linköpings universitet
Robert Wanat
Bangor University
Rafal Mantiuk
Bangor University
Capturing exposure sequences for computing HDR images is prone to motion blur, which also affects HDR light-field recording. This talk introduces a method that reduces motion blur and leads to shorter recording interval. Four exposures were encoded at varying camera perspectives, and long exposure recordings were deblurred by tracking features in low-exposure recordings.
David Schedl
Johannes Kepler Universität Linz
Clemens Birklbauer
Johannes Kepler Universität Linz
Oliver Bimber
Johannes Kepler Universität Linz
This talk presents a use case of a time of flight assisted method, which decisively improves the quality in the estimation of depth maps under real live conditions on a film set.
Simon Spielmann
Filmakademie Baden-Württemberg
Volker Helzle
Filmakademie Baden-Württemberg
Rahul Nair
Heidelberg University