Technical Papers
Display Hardware
Thursday, 25 July 10:45 AM - 12:15 PM
Session Chair: Frédo Durand, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Thursday, 25 July 10:45 AM - 12:15 PM
Session Chair: Frédo Durand, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
An adaptive optimization framework for rapidly generating high-quality images on a range of recent computational display devices.
Felix Heide
The University of British Columbia
Gordon Wetzstein
MIT Media Lab
Ramesh Raskar
MIT Media Lab
Wolfgang Heidrich
The University of British Columbia
Lenticulars are popular for producing glasses-free 3D images. The method describe in this paper increases perceived angular and spatial resolution by modifying the lenslet array to match the content. The results show higher detail and smoother motion parallax compared to fixed-size lenticulars. The technique is demonstrated in simulation and with 3D printed prototypes.
James Tompkin
Disney Research
Simon Heinzle
Disney Research Zürich
Jan Kautz
University College London
Wojciech Matusik
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
The paper describes 3D+2D TV, a 3D display for viewers wearing stereo glasses and a regular 2D display to everyone else, at the same time.
Steven Scher
University of California, Santa Cruz
Jing Liu
University of California, Santa Cruz
Rajan Vaish
University of California, Santa Cruz
Prabath Gunawardane
Google
James Davis
University of California, Santa Cruz
AIREAL is a tactile-feedback device that delivers effective and expressive tactile sensations in free air, without requiring the user to wear a physical device. Combined with interactive graphics and applications, AIREAL enables users to feel virtual objects, experience free-air textures, and receive haptic feedback with free-space gestures.
Rajinder Sodhi
University of Illinois
Ivan Poupyrev
Disney Research Pittsburgh, The Walt Disney Company
Matthew Glisson
Disney Research Pittsburgh, The Walt Disney Company
Ali Israr
Disney Research Pittsburgh, The Walt Disney Company