Title :
Change blindness phenomena for stereoscopic projection systems
Author :
Steinicke, Frank ; Bruder, Gerd ; Hinrichs, Klaus ; Willemsen, Pete
Author_Institution :
Visualization & Comput. Graphics Group, Univ. of Munster, Munster, Germany
Abstract :
In visual perception, change blindness describes the phenomenon that persons viewing a visual scene may apparently fail to detect significant changes in that scene. These phenomena have been observed in both computer generated imagery and real-world scenes. Several studies have demonstrated that change blindness effects occur primarily during visual disruptions such as blinks or saccadic eye movements. However, until now the influence of stereoscopic vision on change blindness has not been studied thoroughly in the context of visual perception research. In this paper we introduce change blindness techniques for stereoscopic projection systems, providing the ability to substantially modify a virtual scene in a manner that is difficult for observers to perceive. We evaluate techniques for passive and active stereoscopic viewing and compare the results to those of monoscopic viewing conditions. For stereoscopic viewing conditions, we found that change blindness phenomena occur with the same magnitude as in monoscopic viewing conditions. Furthermore, we have evaluated the potential of the presented techniques for allowing abrupt, and yet significant, changes of a stereoscopically displayed virtual reality environment.
Keywords :
computer vision; stereo image processing; virtual reality; visual perception; change blindness phenomena; computer generated imagery; real-world scenes; stereoscopic projection systems; stereoscopic vision; virtual reality environment; visual perception; visual scene; Blindness; Computer graphics; Computer science; Humans; Layout; Virtual environment; Virtual reality; Visual perception; Visual system; Visualization; Visual perception; change blindness; stereoscopic viewing;
Conference_Titel :
Virtual Reality Conference (VR), 2010 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Waltham, MA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-6237-7
Electronic_ISBN :
1087-8270
DOI :
10.1109/VR.2010.5444790