3D Nausea Solved By Eye-Tracking 116
An anonymous reader writes "If you are like me, then the slightest disparity in those 3D movies causes nausea — and I know it does with thousands of others too. LG claims to have solved the problem with a new technology that uses eye-tracking, similar to those red-eye detectors in digital cameras, adjusting the 3D display so that you don't get sick. Due to be available in LG's glasses-free 3D computer monitor it also displays normal 2D stuff, so even if you don't use the 3D much it might be worth a try. I plan on buying one of the 20-inch monitors this fall when it becomes available in the U.S. (It's only in Korea now.) If it works as advertised great; if not, at least I can still use it as a regular monitor."
Or... (Score:4, Insightful)
Or you can just stop trying to push this gimmicky, useless 3d garbage on everyone.
What a concept.
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Exactly. Besides, until that eye tracker tracks where the eye is focusing and adjusts the image focus to compensate (this is actually technically possible - they use a similar system to check your vision at some eye doctors now) you're still going to get eyestrain and headaches as you sit there unconsciously trying to bring an out of focus element of the image into focus, which of course you can't do because it was shot out of focus.
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Plenoptic camera [wikimedia.org]
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That solves the image refocusing part. However how would you detect the distance at which the eyes focus?
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I wasn't even thinking of that system. But with it, you don't need to change the focus. Everything is in focus.
Note that this would still suck (though from an aesthetic standpoint rather than a "shit my eyes hurt!" standpoint, which I think would be an improvement) because a big cue for distance is that when we're focusing on something 2 feet away, things 15 feet away are blurry. Take that away and things would look weird.
Really, 3d won't be viable as a "totally realistic" medium until we have holographic p
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Mod the parent down.
In order to give your eyes something to focus on in the first place you'd need to CREATE the plenoptic field that matches the scene. Read: holography of a sort.
Plenoptic functions as I understand them in brief:
The electromagnetic field requires 5 degrees of freedom for each photon. 3 of space and 2 for direction.
-A plenoptic camera can cheerfully ignore one of the degrees of freedom (depth) since all of the light is hitting a plane. This is what allows it to re-focus. It does not, in fac
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That is really cool. I wasn't aware of that technique. It is fun to be wrong.
Unless it's in the context of things like "There's no way I'm about to be eaten by a slavering xenomorph!"
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Unless it's in the context of things like "There's no way I'm about to be eaten by a slavering xenomorph!"
Okay... shouldn't your name be Carter Burke? ;)
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Just a friendly reminder, the bulk of the population are not introverted computer geeks and often watch TV in groups. So you get one happy viewer, well relatively, being covered in every other viewers else's technicolour burps wont be all that pleasant.
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Eye tracking is about as accurate as imagination. I hope people realize that. Head tracking, moderately accurate.
Eye tracking requires that you sit in a specific location in order to be accurate. Moving your head around and this shit won't keep track of anything. Nor will it accurately track your eyes if it's tracking your head in any fashion.
This isn't a solution, it's a farce. I'm so tired of the 3d hype.
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This looks to be embedded in the glasses - so as long as they're relatively secure on your head, moving your head shouldn't move your eyes relative to the sensors much at all. Also, it would have no reason to track your head.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OOy-Dnr3xyU&feature=player_detailpage#t=87s
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Yeah I mean 3D type crap. It's not like we weren't there 120 years ago either, and people said "fuck this" or words to that effect. In a cycle that repeats every oh 10-20 years or so.
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Speaking of useless garbage, this is from the article:
If you try to frame NPR as "ultra-liberal" and try to create some sort of false equivalence to Rush Limbaugh, you are disqualified fr
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Um... some of us actually like 3D. Personally I don't care for it in movies, but in gaming it's great.
And yeah, sure it's gimmicky... for now. But that's because it hasn't matured yet. I think once the play-stage is over, then people will have found lots of industrial uses for it as well.
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I wonder how many people made similar comments when colour TV was first marketed?
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What ever (Score:2)
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you're implying holochicks would be using their mouths to laugh or communicate? not in my specs for a holodeck.....
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Bush didn't need a tele-prompter... or is that a 3D tele-prompter?
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Oh he needed one, he just didn't use one.
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might be a while [smbc-comics.com].
But if you're not alone... (Score:1, Interesting)
And how well does this work when you have more than one pair of eyes to track...? Some of us have friends...
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Some of us have friends...
I don't think your real doll or fleshlight is going to mind if it can't watch the 3d with you.
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I thought something like Solarian living (Score:1)
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Re:But if you're not alone... (Score:4)
(And of course, the answer is in TFA, as this technology doesn't work for more than one person. Fancy stuff that...)
Why not try it at the store first? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm sure those monitors will be very expensive when they first come out. Why not try it in a store first? If it doesn't work, you won't have spent your money on a product that is only partially functional for you. Or you can purchase a regular monitor and have some money left over for something else.
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In a store it is you and your spouse sitting in the perfectly aligned roomed they have already prepared.
At home with 2 kids, and 2 of their friends over, sitting on the floor, in a room that is to shallow, narrow, angled funny, it is a different story.
Current 3D tv's have an optimum viewing angle that can barely fit a 3 person couch. you put a recliner off to the side and the person in the recliner will always have problems. If you don't have a theater size watching room, then you might as well not bother
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as for me I am going to lay down and fondle a pretty girl to watch movies.
There, I made you sound like less of a vagina.
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wtf? Either fondle a girl, or watch a movie. I'm a man, I can't focus on both at once.
Cuddling with a pretty girl while watching a movie on the other hand.. that just improves both.
Sex: It's only part of a relationship.
Anyway, we're both assuming peragrin has amorous intentions towards this pretty girl. He might well have no such intent. Hell, it might be his daughter - every father I know cuddles his daughter while watching TV/films, and most of them wouldn't call her anything other than 'pretty' while she
Cool story, bro. (Score:1)
Cool story, bro. Have any more boring personal stories you want to share with us?
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Met a jerk on the internet...
Ok, I'll bite... (Score:2, Insightful)
So if this adjusts the picture based on your eyes, what does it do if multiple people are watching? Especially when they go to the "Glass-less" version?
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It doesn't work for multiple people hence why they mention that in TFA.
The only major limitation is that it can only track the location of a single user's eyes. Thus the technology is not appropriate for TVs where multiple users may be watching from different angles.
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Heck "Glass-less" 3D doesn't work with multiple viewers (unless they are stacked vertically) so the point is rather mute.
Nausea would be an upgrade. (Score:2)
...compared to the crushing headaches many people get from so-called "3D".
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So that's why Tylenol is investing so much into 3D TV's.
Hey Hollywood.... (Score:1)
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Well stereo is now widely used and it definitely adds to the quality of music. If 3D's going the way of stereo I foresee a bright future for it.
If you are like me (Score:2)
You wouldn't wear a rubber chicken suit either.
Too early to buy (Score:2)
No wonder 3D TVs are not selling well, people know all too well it's too early and that their new set will be an obsolete design next month.
Keep it to yourself (Score:5, Insightful)
I plan on buying one of the 20-inch monitors this fall when it becomes available in the U.S. (It's only in Korea now.)
Um, good for you? Who cares? Anything else you would like tell us? Keep the inane commentary out of the summaries please.
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Wow, taking the social out of social media since whenever you joined /. Nice.
Are you sure the content isn't making you ill? (Score:3)
n/t
and mouth tracking (Score:1)
and it will be using mouth tracking to determine when it has failed and vomiting ensues.
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Focal depth must match stereo depth. (Score:5, Interesting)
As I wrote on Gizmag:
As an armchair scientist, I have been experimenting with screens for quite a while. Trying to plot out what factors are involved for 3D display and depth perception.
I have been following this whole 3D craze with dismay because TV builders have failed to address the fundamentals.
Stereo vision is only one aspect of 3D vision and in fact not even nearly as powerful as some other effects. Although there are many causing discomfort the light ray divergence is most relevant.
Your eye also tells you how far away something is by the amount of work it needs to do to bring it into focus. The lens in your eye bends incoming light rays so they focus on your retina similar to how a photo camera works. To get the best possible 3D effect in commercial flight simulators, they make use of collimated displays.
Consider the pixels on your LCD screen a light sources. Take a pixel and you can consider it to be a light point that radiates light in all directions. After all you want to see the screen at many viewing angles. So the light rays diverge and the lens in your eye needs to bring the rays that hit the eye together to focus on your retina.
A collimated display emits light rays that are more or less parallel. Your eyes can relax more in order to focus which is an very powerful depth suggestion.
Stereo vision and focal distance need to match in order to get rid of the worst nauseating effect. Stereo vision may suggest something is in front of the screen but your eye disagrees because it needs to focus on the screen. These two inputs are fighting each other continuously.
The only way to solve this problem is if we can build a display with an adjustable micro lens in front of each screen pixel. If we can control the light ray divergence from a single pixel in real-time then we can match the stereo vision with focal distance and finally get rid if this mismatch. Added benefit is that displays like this can be adjusted for your eyes so you can watch TV without your glasses. They would make really good computer monitors.
A pixel worth of imagery normally only contains R, G and B channels for Red, Green and Blue light that combine to any color. In addition each pixel needs a fourth channel indicating the depth of the pixel. You may find the focal depth powerful enough without the need for stereo vision. You can try this simply by closing one eye and look around and notice how your eye adjusts to things nearby and far away.
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Yeah, that as a bit presumptuous I agree. "One way to solve..." would have been a better choice of words.
Just tried to point out that you need to match focal depth with stereo depth. The way in which to do that is indeed open.
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Yeah... as Obiwan once said ... "only a sith deals in absolutes".
FWIW, that's not actually irony... although I've heard criticism about the writing of the movie that quote is from suggesting that it is. However, the notion of dealing in absolutes, which represents a particular philosophical outlook, is wholly different from merely stating a proposition that happens to be definitive. In a nutshell "dealing in absolutes" means having an absolutist point of view ("my way or the highway", for example).
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Thanks for that deep insight. Slashdot worthy.
Lol 1000 years from now they will think the star-wars movie script was some kind of bible.
There's another one too (Score:3)
Parallax. When you shift your head, objects in the front appear to move more than objects further away. This matters even in a more or less stationary position because you change your head position and the scene should change, but doesn't.
I'm not sure why this aspect has been so ignored because it is a big cue, and one you can do on existing screens, at least with video games. You just need something to track the head position and orientation of the viewer, then adjust the screen accordingly.
Now that has li
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Yes, that is another important one. I have been doing some experiments on that as you can see in this video on my youtube channel:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZBdtPz2V_vY [youtube.com]
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Yep, seems to work great. I saw it done with a Wiimote (they have an IR camera in the end) and a couple of LEDs taped to glasses. Regardless, this is the kind of product I think would be good for 3D gaming. No it isn't "real 3D" but given how well it works, and that all you'd need is the tracking hardware, I think it would be great.
However it would seem the people who make gaming hardware don't agree, they are all in on the 3D shutter glasses stuff which I want not at all.
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Only way is to render for every user (Score:2)
This means you can't *film* a movie in 3D, you have to create it and have it rendered in real time.
It will happen, just not quite yet...
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Bouncing light off a screen is ok to deliver a moving painting but very ill equipped to deliver a personalized realistic 3D visualization. A personal viewer makes much more sense. Here is hoping personal video googles will take off after all. Now people are "trained" to watch 3D TV with shutter goggles this might not be such a stretch.
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Secondly, peopel are already moving away from shutterglasses. Polarized glasses give just as good a experience but at a fraction of the cost allowing larger audiences.
You are ofcource right though. Every user needs custom content and as such delivery will probably have to be a personal viewer.
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Well, I believe that normal flat TV screens are a great and social way to share visual information. A moving painting. I think it is much easier to have personal Head Mounted Displays for the full 3D immersion.
After doing some searching today I could only find Sensics that makes high resolution HMD's the prices are just a little prohibitive. 20k and up.
But like with anything scaling technology can bring the price down well under $500 I imagine.
http://sensics.com/technology/breakthrough.php [sensics.com]
If accurate head-t
A bit late (Score:1)
Did anyone read the article? (Score:2)
If yes, please tell me where in the article does it say that whatever LG did had anything to do with getting sick while watching 3D movies. The article is a bit too technical for me and I don't really see the connections. Any geeks to my rescue?
Eye tracking? (Score:2)
Eye tracking built into a display so it can adjust the image? Sounds like a great way to keep the ads right in front of you.
No thanks!
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I want eye tracking built into a display so I can have eye tracking. I'm not going to buy any of these displays since I already have two monitors on my PC but I have long wanted eye tracking. Actually, I want it a lot more in the car...
ok (Score:1)
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Laser probing for everyone! (Score:1)