2001
DOI: 10.1117/12.430814
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<title>Desktop autostereoscopic display with head tracking capability</title>

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Cited by 14 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Tracked systems [13], [14], [15] direct a stereo pair of views to the eye positions, and follow those positions from frame to frame. Until now, they have been limited to a single user.…”
Section: Barrier Strip Asmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Tracked systems [13], [14], [15] direct a stereo pair of views to the eye positions, and follow those positions from frame to frame. Until now, they have been limited to a single user.…”
Section: Barrier Strip Asmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A display operating on a similar principle was described by the Japanese Sea Phone company [91] where the illumination is provided from two monochrome displays, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Media Lab described the use of an SLM that rotates the polarization by 90 in order to produce exit pupils [92]. The Korea Institute of Science and Technology display projects the images of two LCD panels on to a Fresnel lens [93].…”
Section: Head-tracked Displaysmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…LCD panels on to a Fresnel lens. 7 Lenticular screen displays can be used in conjunction with a head tracker to allow greater freedom of head movement, and the earliest reference found is that of NTT in 1989, 8 where columns of pixels of a conventional lenticular 3-D display are switched in order to eliminate pseudoscopic (left and right transposed) images when the head is in certain positions. However, when an eye is located between viewing zones the optics do not enable a clear stereoscopic image to be seen.…”
Section: Head-tracking 3-d Displaysmentioning
confidence: 99%