The 4th ACM SIGGRAPH Conference and Exhibition on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques in Asia
Conference 12-15 December • Exhibition 13-15 December • Hong Kong Convention & Exhibition Centre |
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Thursday, 15 December 16:15 -
18:25 |
Convention Hall B
Session Chair
Karol Myzskowski
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Polarization Fields: Dynamic Light Field Display Using Multi-Layer Liquid Crystal DisplaysWe introduce polarization fields as an optically-efficient construction for dynamic light field display with layered Liquid Crystal Displays (LCDs). We construct a prototype and show interactive display using a GPU-based implementation. Douglas Lanman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
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Computing and Fabricating Multilayer ModelsWe show how to compute multilayer models - for example a parallel stack of high-resolution semi-transparent 2D images - from 3D surface models or volumetric data. Michael Holroyd, University of Virginia and Disney Research Zurich |
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C1x6: A Stereoscopic Six-User Display for Co-located Collaboration in Shared Virtual EnvironmentsThe first large screen stereoscopic multi-viewer display provides precise horizontal and vertical parallax for six tracked users. The system includes novel application-controlled shutter glasses with improved switching speed and contrast ratio. Augmented group navigation techniques facilitate the exploration of virtual environments in large groups. Alexander Kulik, Bauhaus-Universität Weimar |
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OSCAM - Optimized Stereoscopic Camera Control for Interactive 3DWe derive constraints on the interaxial and convergence that let our controller automatically adapt to any given viewing situation and 3D scene, providing full control over the perceived depth range. Thomas Oskam, The Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich |
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Multi-perspective Stereoscopy from Light FieldsWe propose a framework for flexible stereoscopic disparity manipulation and content post-production. Our method computes multi-perspective stereoscopic output images from a 3D light field that satisfies arbitrary prescribed disparity constraints. We achieve this by computing piecewise continuous cuts through the light field, enabling per-pixel disparity control. Changil Kim, The Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich and Disney Research Zurich |