29 January - 2 February, 2017 • Burlingame, California USA

Stereoscopic Displays and Applications XXVIII

Stereoscopic Displays and Applications XXVIII


Monday January 30, 2017

Stereoscopic Human Factors and Applications

Session Chair: Takashi Kawai, Waseda University (Japan)
8:50 – 10:20 AM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

8:50SD&A-353
Expert viewers' preferences for higher frame rate 3D film (JIST-first), Robert Allison1, Laurie Wilcox2, Roy Anthony3, John Helliker4, and Bert Dunk4; 1York University, 2Centre for Vision Research, York University, 3Christie Digital, and 4Sheridan College (Canada)

9:10SD&A-354
Investigating aircrew depth perception standards using a stereoscopic simulation environment, Marc Winterbottom1, Charles Lloyd2, James Gaska1, Logan Williams1, Elizabeth Shoda3, and Steven Hadley1; 1U.S. Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine, 2Visual Performance LLC, and 3Wyle Laboratories (United States)

9:30SD&A-355
Estimation of altitude in stereoscopic-3D versus 2D real-world scenes, Lesley Deas1, Robert Allison1, Brittney Hartle1, Elizabeth Irving2, Mackenzie Glaholt3, and Laurie Wilcox1; 1York University, 2University of Waterloo, and 3Defence Research and Development Canada (Canada)

9:50SD&A-356
Study of objective parameters of 3D visual fatigue based on analysis of salient area, Minghan Du, Yue Liu, Yongtian Wang, and Bochao Zou, Beijing Institute of Technology (China)

10:10
SD&A Opening Remarks, Andrew Woods, Curtin University (Australia)


10:20 – 10:50 AM Coffee Break

Autostereoscopic Displays I

Session Chair: Gregg Favalora, Draper (United States)
10:50 AM – 12:30 PM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

10:50SD&A-357
Architectures and codecs for real-time light field streaming (JIST-first), Péter Kovács1,2, Alireza Zare1,3, Tibor Balogh2, Robert Bregovic1, and Atanas Gotchev1; 1Tampere University of Technology (Finland), 2Holografika (Hungary), and 3Nokia Technologies (Finland)

11:10SD&A-358
Wide viewing angle projection-type integral 3D display system with multiple UHD projectors, Hayato Watanabe, Masahiro Kawakita, Naoto Okaichi, Hisayuki Sasaki, Masanori Kano, Jun Arai, and Tomoyuki Mishina, Science and Technology Research Laboratories, NHK (Japan Broadcasting Corporation) (Japan)

11:30SD&A-359
A novel hardware based method for multiview glassless 3D display, Laurence Lujun Chen, 4D perception LLC (United States)

11:50SD&A-360
Multilevel light modulation of three-dimensional magneto-optic spatial light modulator using optically addressing method, Kazuki Nakamura1, Kazuki Yamazaki1, Hiroyuki Takagi1, Taichi Goto1,2, Pang Boey Lim1, Hironaga Uchida1, and Mitsuteru Inoue1; 1Toyohashi University of Technology and 2JST PRESTO (Japan)

12:10SD&A-361
Integral three-dimensional display with high image quality using multiple flat-panel displays, Naoto Okaichi, Hayato Watanabe, Hisayuki Sasaki, Jun Arai, Masahiro Kawakita, and Tomoyuki Mishina, Science and Technology Research Laboratories, NHK (Japan Broadcasting Corporation) (Japan)


12:30 – 2:00 PM Lunch Break

EI 2017 Opening Plenary and Symposium Awards

Session Chairs: Joyce E. Farrell, Stanford University, and Nitin Sampat, Rochester Institute of Technology (United States)
2:00 – 3:00 PM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

Giga-scale 3D computational microscopy, Laura Waller, University of California, Berkeley (United States)

Laura Waller is the Ted Van Duzer Endowed Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences (EECS) at UC Berkeley. She is a Senior Fellow at the Berkeley Institute of Data Science, and received her BS (2004), MEng (2005), and PhD (2010) in EECS from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Waller's talk is on computational imaging methods for fast capture of gigapixel-scale 3D intensity and phase images in a commercial microscope that employs illumination-side and detection-side coding of angle (Fourier) space with simple hardware and fast acquisition. The result is high-resolution reconstructions across a large field-of-view, achieving high space-bandwith-time product.

3:00 – 3:30 PM Coffee Break

SD&A KEYNOTE 1: Stereoscopic Displays, Tracking, Interaction, Education, and the Web

Session Chair: Andrew Woods, Curtin University (Australia)
3:30 – 4:30 PM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

SD&A-362 Stereoscopic displays, tracking, interaction, education, and the web, David Chavez, zSpace, Inc. (United States)

David Chavez brings 20 years of experience in start-up companies, working with technologies ranging from GSM infrastructure to laptops, printers, PDAs and smartphones, in both consumer and commercial product spaces. He has managed product development teams through the full range of the product life cycle, from initial concept to volume production. Chavez has extensive experience working with suppliers and manufacturing partners worldwide, with a particular emphasis in Asia. He has held various positions in product development organizations such as pen-based computer companies GO & EO, Hewlett Packard, and Handspring.


5:00 – 6:00 PM All-Conference Welcome Reception, Atrium

SD&A Conference 3D Theater

Session Chairs: John Stern, Intuitive Surgical, Inc. (United States), Chris Ward, Lightspeed Design, Inc. (United States), and Andrew Woods, Curtin University (Australia)
6:00 – 7:30 PM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

This ever-popular session of each year's Stereoscopic Displays and Applications Conference showcases the wide variety of 3D content that is being produced and exhibited around the world. All 3D footage screened in the 3D Theater Session is shown in high-quality polarized 3D on a large screen. The final program will be announced at the conference and 3D glasses will be provided.

Tuesday January 31, 2017

Human Vision and Stereoscopic Imaging

Session Chairs: Nicolas Holliman, University of Newcastle (United Kingdom), and Thrasyvoulos Pappas, Northwestern University (United States)
8:50 – 10:10 AM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

This session is jointly sponsored by: Stereoscopic Displays and Applications XXVIII and Human Vision and Electronic Imaging 2017.

8:50HVEI-378
Depth-compressed expression for providing natural, visual experiences with integral 3D displays, Yasuhito Sawahata and Toshiya Morita, Japan Broadcasting Corporation (Japan)

9:10HVEI-379
Blind quality prediction of stereoscopic 3D images, Jiheng Wang1, Qingbo Wu2, Abdul Rehman1, Shiqi Wang1, and Zhou Wang1; 1University of Waterloo (Canada) and 2University of Electronic Science and Technology of China (China)

9:30SD&A-380
Pseudo-haptic by stereoscopic images and effects on muscular activity, Takashi Kawai1, Fumiya Ohta1, Sanghyun Kim1, and Hiroyuki Morikawa1,2; 1Waseda University and 2Aoyama Gakuin University (Japan)

9:50SD&A-381
The effects of proximity cues on visual comfort when viewing stereoscopic contents (JIST-first), Yaohua Xie1, Danli Wang2, and Heng Qiao3; 1Chinese Academy of Sciences, 2Institute of Software, Chinese Academy of Sciences, and 3Central University of Finance and Economics (China)


10:00 AM – 7:30 PM Industry Exhibition

10:10 – 10:50 AM Coffee Break

Autostereoscopic Displays II

Session Chair: Michael Klug, Magic Leap, Inc. (United States)
10:50 AM – 12:30 PM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

10:50SD&A-363
See-through projection 3D display using time-division multiplexing, Masahiro Kajimoto, Hiroki Kamoshita, and Tomohiro Yendo, Nagaoka University of Technology (Japan)

11:10SD&A-364
Flat autostereoscopic 3D display with enhanced resolution using a static color filter barrier, Silvio Jurk, Mathias Kuhlmey, Roland Bartmann, Bernd Duckstein, and René de la Barré, Fraunhofer Heinrich-Hertz-Institute (Germany)

11:30SD&A-365
Portrait and landscape mode convertible stereoscopic display using parallax barriers, Yusuke Minami, Saki Osafune, Goro Hamagishi, Kayo Yoshimoto, and Hideya Takahashi, Osaka City University (Japan)

11:50SD&A-366
Digital holographic display with two-dimensional and three-dimensional convertible feature by high speed switchable diffuser, Keehoon Hong, Yongjun Lim, Hayan Kim, Kwan-Jung Oh, and Hyon-Gon Choo, Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (Republic of Korea)

12:10SD&A-382
A low-cost static volumetric display based on layered high incidence angle scattering, Shawn Frayne, Looking Glass Factory, Inc. (United States)


12:30 – 2:00 PM Lunch Break

EI 2017 Tuesday Plenary and Symposium Awards

Session Chairs: Joyce E. Farrell, Stanford University, and Nitin Sampat, Rochester Institute of Technology (United States)
2:00 – 3:00 PM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

VR 2.0: Making virtual reality better than reality, Gordon Wetzstein, Stanford University (United States)

Gordon Wetzstein is an Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering and, by courtesy, of Computer Science, at Stanford University, and leads the Stanford Computational Imaging Group. He received a PhD in computer science from the University of British Columbia (2011) where his doctoral dissertation focused on computational light modulation for image acquisition and display. In his talk, Wetzstein explores the frontiers of VR systems engineering. Eventually, VR/AR systems will redefine communication, entertainment, education, collaborative work, simulation, training, telesurgery, and basic vision research, as next-generation computational near-eye displays evolve to deliver visual experiences that are better than the real world.

3:00 – 3:30 PM Coffee Break

Stereo-cameras and Stereo-matching

Session Chair: Neil Dodgson, University of Cambridge (United Kingdom)
3:30 – 4:30 PM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

3:30SD&A-367
Real time depth estimation method using hybrid camera system, Eu-Tteum Baek and Yo-Sung Ho, Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology (Republic of Korea)

3:50SD&A-368
Pixel based adaptive normalized cross correlation for illumination invariant stereo matching, Yong-Jun Chang and Yo-Sung Ho, Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology (Republic of Korea)

4:10SD&A-369
Guide image filtering based disparity range control in stereo vision, Ji-Hun Mun and Yo-Sung Ho, Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology (Republic of Korea)


DISCUSSION: SD&A Forum

Moderator: Neil Dodgson, University of Cambridge (United Kingdom)
4:30 – 5:30 PM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

This session is a chance for a hot topic to be discussed by a panel of distinguished guests. Topic and panelists to be announced.

5:30 – 7:30 PM Symposium Demonstration Session, Grand Peninsula Ballroom E

Wednesday February 1, 2017

Stereoscopic Image Quality

Session Chair: Björn Sommer, University of Konstanz (Germany)
8:50 – 10:10 AM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

8:50SD&A-340
Sharpness mismatch and 6 other stereoscopic artifacts measured on 10 Chinese S3D movies, Dmitriy Vatolin, Lomonosov Moscow State University (Russian Federation)

9:10SD&A-370
Bringing 3DMap to the 21st century, Stephan Keith1 and Andrew Woods2; 1Independent Consultant (United States) and 2Curtin University (Australia)

9:30SD&A-371
Subjective and objective study of the relation between 3D and 2D views based on depth and bit rate, Balasubramanyam Appina, IIT Hyderabad (India)

9:50SD&A-373
Improved depth of field analysis of multilayer displays, Hironobu Gotoda, National Institute of Informatics (Japan)


10:00 AM – 4:00 PM Industry Exhibition

10:10 – 10:50 AM Coffee Break

3D Developments

Session Chair: Takashi Kawai, Waseda University (Japan)
10:50 – 11:30 AM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

10:50SD&A-374
Stereo rendering of photorealistic precipitation, Syed Hussain and David McAllister, North Carolina State University (United States)

11:10SD&A-372
Utilization of stereoscopic 3D images in elementary school social studies classes, Takashi Shibata1, Yoshiki Ishihara1, Kazunori Sato2,3, and Ryohei Ikejiri4; 1Tokyo University of Social Welfare, 2Takaido-higashi Elementary School, 3Tohoku University, and 4The University of Tokyo (Japan)


SD&A KEYNOTE 2: 360° 3D Capture - Meeting the Need in VR

Session Chair: Gregg Favalora, Draper (United States)
11:30 AM – 12:30 PM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

SD&A-375 360° 3D capture: Meeting the need in VR, Timothy Macmillan1 and David Newman2; 1Consultant and 2GoPro Inc. (United States)

Tim MacMillan is an award-winning photographic artist whose career with Camera Array systems began in the 1980's. In the 1990's he established Time-Slice Films Ltd. to produce content and innovate array technology for clients such as the BBC, Sky TV, Discovery Channel, and many others. His distinctive approach has been influential in the development of special effects widely used today. MacMillan's work spans both the artistic and technical, with his early camera technology now in the (United Kingdom) Science Museum. As well as architecting and designing Array systems, he has also worked in HD Broadcast Product Development with Grass Valley Cameras, and is currently Senior Manager of Advanced Products at GoPro Cameras.


12:30 – 2:00 PM Lunch Break

EI 2017 Wednesday Plenary and Symposium Awards

Session Chairs: Joyce E. Farrell, Stanford University, and Nitin Sampat, Rochester Institute of Technology (United States)
2:00 – 3:00 PM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

Designing VR video camera systems, Brian Cabral, Facebook, Inc. (United States)

Brian Cabral is Director of Engineering at Facebook, leading the Surround 360 VR camera team, specializing in computational photography, computer vision, and computer graphics. He has published a number of papers in the area of computer graphics and imaging including the pioneering Line Integral Convolution algorithm. Cabral discusses developing Facebook Surround 360, an open, high-quality 3D-360 video capture system. VR video capture systems are composed of multiple optical and digital components - all of which must operate as if they are one seamless optical system. The design of VR video cameras, optical choices, SNR, etc., require a new set of technologies and engineering approaches, with tight coupling to the computational system components.

3:00 – 3:30 PM Coffee Break

Visualization Facilities

Session Chairs: Margaret Dolinsky, Indiana University (United States), and Andrew Woods, Curtin University (Australia)
3:30 – 5:40 PM
Grand Peninsula Ballroom D

This session is jointly sponsored by: Stereoscopic Displays and Applications XXVIII and The Engineering Reality of Virtual Reality 2017.

3:30SD&A-105
Designing a cloud-based 3D visualization engine for smart cities, Nicolas Holliman, Stephen Dowsland, Mark Turner, Richard Cloete, and Tom Picton, Newcastle University (United Kingdom)

3:50SD&A-106
Interactive computer graphics, stereo and VR practice at the Electronic Visualization Laboratory University of Illinois at Chicago, Maxine Brown1, Jason Leigh2, Tom DeFanti3, and Daniel Sandin1; 1The University of Illinois at Chicago, 2University of Hawai'i at Manoa, and 3University of California, San Diego (United States)

4:10ERVR-107
Designing at the Advanced Visualization Lab at Indiana University, Margaret Dolinsky1, Eric Wernert2, Michael Boyles2, and Chris Eller2; 1School of Art and Design, Indiana University and 2Advanced Visualization Lab, Indiana University (United States)

4:30ERVR-108
Exploring Calit2, Jürgen Schulze and Gregory Dawe, University of California, San Diego (United States)

4:50SD&A-109
3D-Stereoscopic immersive analytics projects at Monash University and University of Konstanz, Björn Sommer1,3, David G. Barnes1,4, Sarah Boyd1, Thomas Chandler1, Maxime Cordeil1, Karsten Klein1,3, Toan Nguyen4, Hieu Nim1,5, Kingsley Stephens1, Dany Vohl2, Elliott Wilson1, Jon McCormack1, Kim Marriott1, and Falk Schreiber1,3; 1Monash University (Australia), 2Swinburne University of Technology (Australia), 3University of Konstanz (Germany), 4Monash Immersive Visualization Platform at Monash University (Australia), and 5Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute of Monash University (Australia)

5:10SD&A-110
Image distortions in large-scale immersive display systems – Cylinder and wedge displays, Andrew Woods1, Joshua Hollick1, Jesse Helliwell1, and Paul Bourke2; 1Curtin University and 2University of Western Australia (Australia)

5:30
SD&A Closing Remarks, Nicolas Holliman, Newcastle University (United Kingdom)


5:30 – 7:00 PM Meet the Future: A Showcase of Student and Young Professionals Research, Atrium

Stereoscopic Displays and Applications XXVIII Interactive Papers Session

5:30 – 7:00 PM
Atrium

The following works will be presented at the EI 2017 Symposium Interactive Papers Session.

SD&A-376
Analysis of retinal images for retinal projection type super multi-view 3D head-mounted display, Takashi Emoto, Tadayuki Konda, Kayo Yoshimoto, and Hideya Takahashi, Osaka City University (Japan)

SD&A-377
A new design and algorithm for lenticular lenses display, René de la Barré, Roland Bartmann, Mathias Kuhlmey, Bernd Duckstein, and Silvio Jurk, Fraunhofer HHI (Germany)


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Important Dates
Demonstration Applications Dec 15, 2016
Manuscripts Due (check the conference page)
· Pre conference proceedings Nov 28, 2016 
· Post conference proceedings Jan 11, 2017
Registration Opens
Oct 20,2016
Hotel Reservation Deadline
Jan 6, 2017 
Early Registration Ends
Jan 9, 2017
Conference Starts Jan 29, 2017
 
2016 Proceedings
Conference Chairs
Gregg Favalora, Draper (United States); Nicolas Holliman, Newcastle University (United Kingdom); Takashi Kawai, Waseda University (Japan); Andrew Woods, Curtin University (Australia)

Program Committee
Neil Dodgson, Victoria University of Wellington (New Zealand); Davide Gadia, Università degli Studi di Milano (Italy); Hideki Kakeya, University of Tsukuba (Japan); Stephan Keith, SRK Graphics Research (United States); Michael Klug, Magic Leap, Inc. (United States); John Stern, Intuitive Surgical, Inc. (retired) (United States); Chris Ward, Lightspeed Design, Inc. (United States)

Founding Chair
John O. Merritt, The Meritt Group (USA)