DocumentCode :
1497992
Title :
Emulating Autostereoscopic Lenticular Designs
Author :
Lambooij, Marc ; Hinnen, Karel ; Varekamp, Chris
Author_Institution :
Viewing Experience Innovation Group, Philips BG TV Innovation Site Eindhoven, Eindhoven, Netherlands
Volume :
8
Issue :
5
fYear :
2012
fDate :
5/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
283
Lastpage :
290
Abstract :
Optimizing performance of autostereoscopic lenticular displays can be achieved by altering specific interdependent design parameters, e.g., width and number of views, screen disparity and lenticular slant, resulting in different crosstalk distributions and amounts of banding and consequently, different percepts. To allow the evaluation of an autostereoscopic lenticular display, before a costly physical sample is produced, an emulator was build. This emulator consisted of a goggle-based striped polarized display, a camera-based head tracker and software for generating L/R stereo pairs in real-time as a function of head-location. This paper addresses the development of the emulator, its validation with respect to an existing physical prototype, and the perceptual evaluation of three emulated fundamental design extremes: 1) a 9-view low-cross-talk system; 2) a 9-view intermediate crosstalk system; and 3) a 17-view high crosstalk system.
Keywords :
cameras; crosstalk; screens (display); stereo image processing; 17-view high crosstalk system; 9-view intermediate crosstalk system; 9-view low-cross-talk system; L-R stereo; autostereoscopic lenticular designs; camera-based head tracker; crosstalk distributions; goggle-based striped polarized display; screen disparity; specific interdependent design parameters; Cameras; Crosstalk; Face; Lenses; Observers; Three dimensional displays; Emulation; human factors; perception; stereo image processing; stereo vision; three dimensional TV (3D-TV);
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Display Technology, Journal of
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1551-319X
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JDT.2012.2185681
Filename :
6185656
Link To Document :
بازگشت