The CAVE: audio visual experience automatic virtual environment
Communications of the ACM
IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence - Special issue on interpretation of 3-D scenes—part II
Surround-screen projection-based virtual reality: the design and implementation of the CAVE
SIGGRAPH '93 Proceedings of the 20th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
Panoramic stereo imaging system with automatic disparity warping and seaming
Graphical Models and Image Processing
Multi-projector displays using camera-based registration
VIS '99 Proceedings of the conference on Visualization '99: celebrating ten years
Omnistereo: Panoramic Stereo Imaging
IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence
OmniStereo for Panoramic Virtual Environment Display Systems
VR '04 Proceedings of the IEEE Virtual Reality 2004
A MRF Formulation for Coded Structured Light
3DIM '05 Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on 3-D Digital Imaging and Modeling
Misperceptions in stereoscopic displays: a vision science perspective
Proceedings of the 5th symposium on Applied perception in graphics and visualization
Synthetic stereoscopic panoramic images
VSMM'06 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Interactive Technologies and Sociotechnical Systems
Hi-index | 0.00 |
An omnistereoscopic image is a pair of panoramic images that enables stereoscopic depth perception all around an observer. An omnistereo projection on a cylindrical display does not require tracking of the observer's viewing direction. However, such a display introduces stereo distortions. In this article, we investigate two projection models for rendering 3D scenes in omnistereo. The first is designed to give zero disparity errors at the center of the visual field. The second is the well-known slit-camera model. For both models, disparity errors are shown to increase gradually in the periphery, as visual stereo acuity decreases. We use available data on human stereoscopic acuity limits to argue that depth distortions caused by these models are so small that they cannot be perceived.