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  University of Delaware / Computer Graphics Group

What is an Autostereoscopic Display

Autostereoscopic Displays are three-dimentional display technologies invented at the turn of 20th century. It is as popular as 3D movies and holograms in computer graphics community. The most desirable feature of an autostereoscopic display is that the viewer no longer needs to wear special goggles or other encumbering devices to perceive motion and stereo parallax, which are often important cues for 3D experience. While prior researchers have explored the technique using light fields to build a parallax autostereoscopic display, we develop a different approach based on cyclograph. The proposed autostereoscopic design is capable of providing the observer with "rotational parallax" in addition to motion and stereo parallax.

We would like to thank Professor David Xianfeng Gu from SUNY Stony Brooks for providing the 3D brain model

 
2005 University of Delaware   Computer & Information Sciences Computer Graphics Group maintained and updated by Liang Wei