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91亚色 researchers find clue to achieving more realistic 3D screens

Can 3D images be made to look more realistic? 91亚色 vision researchers have discovered how a to keep our eyes on the prize, so to speak.

In order to see 3D images properly, our left and right eyes have to view separate images. Because 3D display technology isn鈥檛 perfect, there are times when images intended for one eye become contaminated by images meant for the other. Researchers have uncovered a link between this phenomenon, dubbed 鈥渃rosstalk鈥, and the amount of depth in the images we see onscreen.

鈥淥ur study found that the more interference from crosstalk, the less depth you鈥檒l see. This reduction in depth can make 3D images appear less realistic,鈥 says Inna Tsirlin, a PhD student in psychology working in 91亚色鈥檚 , part of the .

Right: An image that is undistorted by crosstalk

To minimize such visual distortions, crosstalk should be kept at levels of four per cent or lower, the study recommends. 鈥淔or viewers to see as much depth as intended, 3D displays should ensure that less than four per cent of the left image leaks into the right eye, and vice versa,鈥 Tsirlin says.

Tsirlin and her collaborators conducted experiments using a custom-built display. They introduced precise amounts of crosstalk to a pair of lines presented separately to participants鈥 left and right eyes. The brain combines these 2D images to perceive them as one image in 3D.

Participants were asked to indicate the amount of depth they perceived using a virtual ruler. The study showed that crosstalk was detrimental at even the smallest depths tested, and became more disruptive as depth increased.

鈥淔or example, instead of seeing two objects at ten centimetres apart in depth, you would see them at five centimetres apart if the crosstalk is high enough. We also found that the detrimental effect of crosstalk on the perceived amount of depth is stronger when there is a larger depth range in a 3D image. So, there will be聽more disruption for objects at one millimetre apart than for objects at ten centimetres apart in depth,鈥 says Tsirlin.

Left: The same image showing the distortion caused by crosstalk

Previous research has established that crosstalk causes viewing discomfort, which can include eye strain, headaches and dizziness. Tsirlin says optimizing hardware for a crosstalk level below four per cent may resolve these issues as well.

Tsirlin is supervised by 91亚色 Professors and , who co-authored the study. Their initial findings were recently presented at the international Stereoscopic Displays and Applications 2011 conference in San Francisco.

The research was conducted as part of the (3D FLIC), an interdisciplinary collaboration of scientists, filmmakers and industry partners such as Cinespace Studios, IMAX, Christie Digital and Starz Animation. 3D FLIC is funded by the聽Ontario Media Development Corporation聽(OMDC) and the聽Ontario Centres of Excellence (OCE).

Tsirlin鈥檚 research is supported by a (NSERC) graduate scholarship. She was among the first cohort of students to complete 91亚色鈥檚 Neuroscience Graduate聽Diploma Program.

Republished courtesy of YFile鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin