Gordon Wetzstein brings AR to regular eye glasses
Combining advances in display technologies, holographic imaging, and artificial intelligence, researchers have found a way to display full-color, 3D moving images over a direct view of the real world.
Gordon Wetzstein has developed a prototype augmented reality headset that uses holographic imaging to overlay full-color, 3D moving images on the lenses of what would appear to be an ordinary pair of glasses. Unlike the bulky headsets of present-day augmented reality systems, the new approach delivers a visually satisfying 3D viewing experience in a compact, comfortable, and attractive form factor suitable for all-day wear.
"Our headset appears to the outside world just like an everyday pair of glasses, but what the wearer sees through the lenses is an enriched world overlaid with vibrant, full-color 3D computed imagery,' states Gordon. The device was introduced in a new paper in the journal Nature.
Though only a prototype now, such a technology, they say, could transform fields stretching from gaming and entertainment to training and education – anywhere computed imagery might enhance or inform the wearer’s understanding of the world around them.
"One could imagine a surgeon wearing such glasses to plan a delicate or complex surgery or airplane mechanic using them to learn to work on the latest jet engine," states Manu Gopakumar, EE PhD candidate and co-first author of the paper.
Excerpted from Stanford Report, 'Augmented reality comes to regular glasses.’ Read full article.