Site icon OFH

What we’re reading: 3D display advances

exc-52c2c598e4b0c3113b8d4c91

Hello from Optics for Hire, where the topic of 3-D display has been coming up even more than usual. At the moment, the clouds over Arlington are trying to figure out how much snow to deposit on Mass Ave. Feels like the right mood to share a few of the things crossing my desk:

Good LinkedIn Groups for 3-D display:

 

Need assistance designing a custom optic or imaging lens ? Learn more about our design services here.

 

Recent obsession: I wonder to what extent autostereoscopic cinema is feasible in 2012. Will the technological enabler be a many-projector system like Holografika‘s, a variant of a “specular” display , or the rebirth of mid-century techniques (doubt it)? My interest in this was recently rekindled by the movie Hugo’s depiction of Georges Melies building optical systems, filming entertaining content (movies!), and exhibiting them. Then again growing up in West Orange, NJ sort of primes one for that interest (T. A. Edison).

Speaking of autostereo cinema, I recommend the SD&A 2012 proceedings paper by Walter Funk. It’s available now through the SPIE Digital Library and has 80+ references. He discusses very early work, such as Maxwell’s real-image stereoscope, the Swan “Crystal Cube Miniatures,” and the development of parallax barrier and fly’s-eye lens arrays (Berthier, Jacobson, Ives, …).And that’s not all, page after page of references regarding the early days of autostereo cinema (1920s?), Noaillon’s work, theaters in France and the USSR.

Walter Funk, “History of autostereoscopic cinema,” Proc. SPIE 8288, 82880R (2012)

New conference. The OSA is experimenting with a new conference format, called “incubators.” They hope to encourage frank and less-guarded discussion amongst peers and competitors in these meetings with an interesting format: several expert panel discussions followed by lengthy discussion periods (each attendee table has a high-quality microphone). Last week, in DC, was the 3D Display Technology, Perception and Application Incubator Meeting, chaired by Nasser Peyghambarain, Mike Bove, and Hong Hua. This was a lot of fun; heck, it was the first optics meeting witness to a brief shouting match. About holo-pixels!

What new things did I learn there?

Speaking of MIT’s contributions to holographic display, Mark Lucente and Mike Klug showed enticing videos of Zebra Imaging’s ZScape displays. Also, some footage from (1980s?) Media Lab. Digging through YouTube, I found them and also some wonderful clips of the late Stephen Benton.

  1. (1992) BBC documentary re: holovideo (YouTube)

  2. (1985) Synthetic Holography, a Media Lab videodisc (YouTube) Check out 3:04 for Benton’s description of their alcove hologram.

French autostereoscopic cinema

Interview and frankly amazing footage of le cyclo-stereoscope(1940s? 1950s?). No, really, check it out. Giant spinning rods! Popcorn! What could go wrong?

Surveys of the field

I am considering adding a page to my personal website with suggested readings for new researchers in autostereo. Until then, here are a few:

Backgrounder:

Surveys of recent advances: These two have different emphases:

  1. N. S. Holliman, N. A. Dodgson, G. E. Favalora, and L. Pockett, “Three-Dimensional Displays: A Review and Applications Analysis (invited),” IEEE Trans Broadcasting,57(2), 362-371 (June 2011). Available via IEEE, or here.

  2. J. Hong, Y. Kim, H.-J. Choi, J. Hahn, J.-H. Park, H. Kim, S.-W. Min, N. Chen, and B. Lee, “Three-dimensional display technologies of recent interest: principles, status, and issues (invited),” Appl. Opt. 50, H87-H115 (2011). (Optics InfoBase)

And… workshop on computational displays!

Hear-ye, hear-ye! The CVPR 2012 Workshop for Computational Cameras and Displays has issued a call for papers. See here.

G-Fav

ps. Look into the eyes of the Bokode Owl (Wait for it…) Click “show more” if you’re not up on bokodes.

Exit mobile version