| Publication Type |
abstract |
| School or College |
College of Engineering |
| Department |
Kahlert School of Computing |
| Program |
Advanced Research Projects Agency |
| Creator |
Hu, Helen H. |
| Other Author |
Creem, Sarah H.; Gooch, Amy A.; Thompson, William B. |
| Title |
Visual cues for perceiving distances from objects to surfaces (Abstract) |
| Date |
2002-02-03 |
| Description |
An accurate perception of the distance between an object and a nearby surface can increase a viewer?s sense of presence in an immersive environment, particularly when a user is performing actions that affect or are affected by this distance. Two experiments were conducted examining the effectiveness of stereopsis, shadows, and interreflections at conveying this distance information. Subjects performed simple tasks based on the perception of the distance between a fixed surface and an approacing object in a virtual environment. In the first experiment, only stereopsis had a statistically significant effect on subject performance. In the second experiment, a different methodology was used, and all three cues (stereopsis, shadows, and interreflections) were shown to be statistically significant distance cues. |
| Type |
Text |
| Publisher |
University of Utah |
| Subject |
distance perception; immersive environment |
| Subject LCSH |
Depth perception |
| Language |
eng |
| Bibliographic Citation |
Hu, Helen H.; Creem, Sarah H.; Gooch, Amy A.; Thompson, William B. (2002). Visual cues for perceiving distances from objects to surfaces (Abstract). UUCS-02-007. |
| Series |
University of Utah Computer Science Technical Report |
| Relation is Part of |
ARPANET |
| Rights Management |
©University of Utah |
| Format Medium |
application/pdf |
| Format Extent |
4,591 bytes |
| Source |
University of Utah School of Computing |
| ARK |
ark:/87278/s6v98sg6 |
| Setname |
ir_uspace |
| ID |
704932 |
| OCR Text |
Show Visual Cues for Perceiving Distances from Objects to Surfaces Helen H. Hu, Sarah H. Creem, Amy A. Gooch, William B. Thompson UUCS-02-007 School of Computing University of Utah Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA February 3, 2002 Abstract An accurate perception of the distance between an object and a nearby surface can in- crease a viewer's sense of presence in an immersive environment, particularly when a user is performing actions that affect or are affected by this distance. Two experiments were conducted examining the effectiveness of stereopsis, shadows, and interreflections at con- veying this distance information. Subjects performed simple tasks based on the perception of the distance between a fixed surface and an approacing object in a virtual environment. In the first experiment, only stereopsis had a statistically significant effect on subject per- formance. In the second experiment, a different methodology was used, and all three cues (stereopsis, shadows, and interreflections) were shown to be statistically significant dis- tance cues. |
| Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6v98sg6 |