DocumentCode
2194490
Title
Stereoscopic Visualization of Scientific and Medical Content for Education: Seeing in 3D
Author
William, Albert
Author_Institution
Sch. of Inf. at IUPUI, Indiana Univ., Indianapolis, IN
fYear
2008
fDate
7-12 Dec. 2008
Firstpage
319
Lastpage
320
Abstract
The use of stereoscopic displays to educate students on the complex subjects of science and health holds great promise. Traditionally, students have not been easily able to visualize concepts using standard textbooks, and stereo displays fill a role that will allow these students a greater insight to the materials that often have gone misunderstood. Often, science is portrayed by artists who may not understand the science and thus misrepresent the subject matter, or by the scientist who is not capable of rendering images of a complex nature with the artist´s technical ability. The technologies used to create and display stereoscopic content are becoming increasingly economically feasible and user friendly. The end result of this situation will be to permit a more fascinating, accurate, and dynamic learning environment that can be available to anyone interested in exploring science and health.
Keywords
computer aided instruction; rendering (computer graphics); stereo image processing; dynamic learning; image rendering; medical content; scientific content; stereoscopic visualization; Animation; Biomedical imaging; Biomedical informatics; Displays; Hardware; Motion pictures; Pipelines; Production; Proteins; Visualization; computer generated; stereoscopic; visualization;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
eScience, 2008. eScience '08. IEEE Fourth International Conference on
Conference_Location
Indianapolis, IN
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-3380-3
Electronic_ISBN
978-0-7695-3535-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/eScience.2008.139
Filename
4736774
Link To Document