Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

New Google Glass-like device to minimise eye fatigue

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 29 May, 2014 01:27 PM
    Scanning your smart phone to find the nearest restaurant or directing Google Glass to show you a detailed map of the street is all fine but augmented reality (AR) is not good for your eyes in the long run.
     
    To address this, researchers have developed a Google Glass-like device that may lead to 3D augmented reality technology that minimises visual fatigue.
     
    The new device, developed by researchers at University of Arizona in Tucson and University of Connecticut in Storrs, makes augmented reality technology easier on the eyes for short-distance applications by superimposing a 3D image, rather than the standard 2D image, onto the 3D view of the real world.
     
    The superimposition of a 3D image onto a direct view of reality allows you to see the virtual image as if it were a real, 3D object in the physical space in front of you.
     
    “Minimising visual discomfort involved in wearing AR displays remains an unresolved challenge. This work is making a significant step forward in addressing this important issue,” said first author Hong Hua from University of Arizona.
     
    A lightweight, compact and high-performance Google Glass-like device - called an optical see-through head-mounted display (OST-HMD) - could potentially be “a transformative technology to redefine the way we perceive and interact with digital information”.
     
    For example, it could one day allow a doctor to see computed tomography (CT) images overlaid on a patient's abdomen during surgery or provide a new way to train soldiers by incorporating 3D virtual objects into real-life environments.
     
    AR goggles for long-distance viewing do not always cause eye strain; some of these eye-friendly designs are actively used for military applications.
     
    But short-distance designs - in which you would focus simultaneously on a 2D screen and a 3D world immediately around you - do cause visual discomfort, owing to the so-called accommodation-convergence mismatch problem.
     
    “The eyes are going back and forth between the screen and the three-dimensional scene away from the screen, causing conflicting depth perception cues and visual fatigue,” Hua explained.
     
    “In the new technology, there is no conflict in how your eyes focus, giving you a much more comfortable version of augmented reality,” Hua added in a paper published in the open-access journal Optics Express.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Your handy guide to the web's most popular services

    Your handy guide to the web's most popular services
    Want a handy guide to the hottest sites on the internet? A list is provided below. But first let's start with a wordy introduction in traditional Serious Journalist style

    Your handy guide to the web's most popular services

    Sexting to keep passions alive in virtual world

    Sexting to keep passions alive in virtual world
    A new research suggests that one in three sexual encounters now takes place online and this includes sexting, video or webcam sex and explicit snapchat images.

    Sexting to keep passions alive in virtual world

    Can ancient Chinese tree extract treat pancreatic cancer?

    Can ancient Chinese tree extract treat pancreatic cancer?
    The bark of an ancient Chinese tree holds promise in the fight against pancreatic cancer - with the potential to make inroads against several more variants of the disease.

    Can ancient Chinese tree extract treat pancreatic cancer?

    More people hooked to social media before sleep

    More people hooked to social media before sleep
    New research reveals the average bedtime ritual consists of checking social media networks four times and watching 17 minutes of television.

    More people hooked to social media before sleep

    Camera that detects skin cancer in two seconds!

    Camera that detects skin cancer in two seconds!
     Finnish researchers have developed a new camera that is able to detect early stages of skin cancer in matter of seconds.

    Camera that detects skin cancer in two seconds!

    Game changer? Two-screen smart phone is here

    Game changer? Two-screen smart phone is here
    Developed by a Moscow firm, YotaPhone would be the first to be available in the US when it goes on sale later this year, before hitting Asian markets

    Game changer? Two-screen smart phone is here